This paper explains the growth of the FBI (“Bureau”) in the United States at a time when criminal justice was largely a local matter by reframing the criminal justice “(eco)system” in terms of informational economy, rather than jurisdictional authority. It argues that the Bureau came to occupy a key position in the national law enforcement ecosystem by providing an informational infrastructure that enabled it to cultivate relationships with local police agencies. This history offers two insights about the nature of American state and federalism in the twentieth century. First, the Bureau’s particular strategy for enlarging its capacity beyond its small size had the ironic effect of trading bureaucratic autonomy for political and operational...
The role that the Federal Government should play in the control of crime in a federal system continu...
Two lines of questions dominate discussions about how the nation ought to respond at home to the new...
This Essay explores the mechanisms of control over federal criminal enforcement that the administrat...
This paper explains the growth of the FBI (“Bureau”) in the United States at a time when criminal ju...
This Article examines the endurance of police localism amid the improbable growth of the FBI in the ...
The Bureau of Investigation, direct precursor to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), was crea...
The dramatic expansion of federal criminal law jurisdiction and policing responsibilities in recent ...
The history of the federal involvement in violent crime frequently is told as one of entrepreneurial...
This thesis looks to analyze and understand how U.S. government officials created the first domestic...
Traditionally, U.S.-state criminal justice relations have been conceived in two-dimensional terms, w...
I argue in 1935, the United States recognized the necessity for a powerful national crime fighting o...
The federalization of American criminal law was not an issue that would have been discussed prior to...
This study fills a hole left in research about the Federal Bureau of Investigation. While previous a...
Discussions about the federalization of crime traditionally have focused on substantive law: a crime...
The problem of organized crime presents one of the greatest threats to the stability of our manner o...
The role that the Federal Government should play in the control of crime in a federal system continu...
Two lines of questions dominate discussions about how the nation ought to respond at home to the new...
This Essay explores the mechanisms of control over federal criminal enforcement that the administrat...
This paper explains the growth of the FBI (“Bureau”) in the United States at a time when criminal ju...
This Article examines the endurance of police localism amid the improbable growth of the FBI in the ...
The Bureau of Investigation, direct precursor to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), was crea...
The dramatic expansion of federal criminal law jurisdiction and policing responsibilities in recent ...
The history of the federal involvement in violent crime frequently is told as one of entrepreneurial...
This thesis looks to analyze and understand how U.S. government officials created the first domestic...
Traditionally, U.S.-state criminal justice relations have been conceived in two-dimensional terms, w...
I argue in 1935, the United States recognized the necessity for a powerful national crime fighting o...
The federalization of American criminal law was not an issue that would have been discussed prior to...
This study fills a hole left in research about the Federal Bureau of Investigation. While previous a...
Discussions about the federalization of crime traditionally have focused on substantive law: a crime...
The problem of organized crime presents one of the greatest threats to the stability of our manner o...
The role that the Federal Government should play in the control of crime in a federal system continu...
Two lines of questions dominate discussions about how the nation ought to respond at home to the new...
This Essay explores the mechanisms of control over federal criminal enforcement that the administrat...