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Drugs, ships and containers : how anti-terrorism benefits shipping security

journal contribution
posted on 2011-03-01, 00:00 authored by Timothy Martin
Using ships to transport illicit drugs is not new; nor is the practice of concealing them
in shipping containers decreasing – or is it? This article questions whether recent container security initiatives created to stop terrorism have also achieved a decrease in the use of containers for smuggling illicit drugs. Or, are these maritime security regimes creating a false sense of achievement, being too limited in scope to be truly useful in this secondary role? Logically, improved detection of illicit drugs in containers shipped by sea is more likely when port personnel are better trained, x-ray scanners installed, port fencing improved and official collaboration encouraged. However, since the number of containers being electronically screened and physically searched has only marginally improved, the question is, is it enough?

History

Journal

Strategic insights

Volume

31

Pagination

12 - 16

Publisher

Risk Intelligence

Location

Vedbaek, Denmark

Language

eng

Publication classification

C3 Non-refereed articles in a professional journal

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