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7 pages. This is an assessment of the impact of the United Nations' initiatives against organized criminal activity since 1960. The paper will outline what some of those initiatives were and there is a critique as to the impact that has been made. The critique will consider any shortcomings, improvements that might be made, as well as an assessment of positive impact in fighting organized crime. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_JAunorgc.rtf
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outline what some of those initiatives were and there is a critique as to the impact that has been made. The critique will consider any shortcomings, improvements that might
be made, as well as an assessment of positive impact in fighting organized crime. UNITED NATIONS INITIATIVES The United Nations has worked together to help its member nations fight
organized crime that affects us all. With the terrorist attack of September 11 this organization is now even more important than ever. It is when the nations work
together that they can be the most effective in slowing the criminal activity that is running rampant all over the world today. The United Nations in 2000 drafted a crime
initiative on Transnational Organized Crime. One of the activities about which they are most concerned is that of smuggling. Smuggling involves "smuggling of migrants and trafficking in persons
for the establishment of an effective legal framework against transnational organized crime" (Martin & Miller 2000, 969). Also signed into the crime initiative by then-President Clinton was the "optional
Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict and the Optional Protocol on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography" (Martin & Miller 2000, 969). Both of
these actions by the United Nations will help alleviate the numbers of smuggling activity going on across international borders. If all nations are involved in fighting the same types
of activity it will make a much more effective shield against this sort of activity taking place. Neither the country from which smuggling is taking place nor the country
to which it is going will be sympathetic, thus giving smugglers a bigger hazard of getting caught. There will be no safe base if the United Nations has a
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