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FAVAREL-GARRIGUES, GILLES (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   139271


Power horizontal: the public–private enforcement of judicial decisions in Russia / Favarel-Garrigues, Gilles   Article
Favarel-Garrigues, Gilles Article
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Summary/Abstract Based on fieldwork done in Ekaterinburg, this article deals with the enforcement of legal decisions about economic disputes in the late 2000s in Russia. As state employees, bailiffs are responsible for the implementation of court decisions but their efficiency depends on the cases they deal with. In the most successful cases, they are backed by private enforcers, hired by the claimant and often coming from the law enforcement agencies. This common work reflects an informal public–private partnership from below in which bailiffs and private enforcers co-execute judicial decisions. Such autonomous public–private power configurations at local level challenge the governmental claim to build a ‘power vertical’ in Russia from the top.
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2
ID:   105943


Reluctant partners?: banks in the fight against money laundering and terrorism financing in France / Favarel-Garrigues, Gilles; Godefroy, Thierry; Lascoumes, Pierre   Journal Article
Favarel-Garrigues, Gilles Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract The implementation of the ongoing anti-money laundering/counter-terrorism financing (AML/CTF) drive within the private sector reflects a tension between the logic of state sovereignty and that of neoliberal governmentality. In this article, we show that the main concrete output of two decades of global policy in this area is found in the routinization of professional interactions between banks and law enforcement agencies. Banks recruit former law enforcement officials and attempt to establish informal ties with the police or intelligence bodies. They are also actively involved in intelligence-led policing missions and have become embedded in interdependent relationships with law enforcement agencies. Drawing on data from 75 interviews conducted with AML/CTF professionals within France, the article shows how new everyday professional routines in the banking sector reflect governmentality in the making.
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3
ID:   177905


Vigilante shows’ and law enforcement in Russia / Favarel-Garrigues, Gilles   Journal Article
Favarel-Garrigues, Gilles Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Moral entrepreneurs who volunteer to enforce rules by themselves have spread in 2010s Russia. As ‘rule enforcers’ they patrol the streets to catch offenders. Some of these enforcers have conflictual relations with the police, while others operate in cooperation with it. This essay describes the development of vigilante justice in contemporary Russia. Two particularities of the Russian case are striking. First, the activities of several citizen policing initiatives are in fact recorded and posted on YouTube and VKontakte, where they reach a large audience, generating support for their activities and, in particular, for the leaders of such groups. Second, the development of these groups is not the simple outcome of a powerless state failing to maintain order or to fight crime. The essay will reveal how these new forms of policing contribute, paradoxically, to the strengthening of state authority.
Key Words Russia  Law Enforcement  Citizen 
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