The at 91做厙 announces the launch of the a research hub dedicated to advancing the study of one of todays most urgent global challengestransnational crime.
Building on the Schar Schools longstanding strengths, CONTRA brings together the facultys broad, interdisciplinary, and highly regarded expertise to investigate the complex dynamics of transnational crime and its far-reaching impacts on global order.
CONTRAs cutting-edge scholarship underscores the Schar Schools role as a leader in the study of transnational crime. Led by codirectors Professor , Professor and Omer L. and Nancy Hirst Endowed Chair , and Distinguished University Professor , the center draws on each of their landmark contributions to their fields:
- Wedels seminal analyses of corruption and informal power networks reveal how elites operate across blurred publicprivate boundaries, reshaping governance and accountability worldwide.
- Koizumis highly innovative quantitative methods and network modeling approaches illuminate illicit organ trafficking and other hidden economies, offering powerful and practical tools to understand and disrupt criminal markets.
- Correa-Cabreras research on migration, borderlands, networks, and criminal organizations has significantly advanced understanding of the intersections between human smuggling, organized crime, and state power.
Together, their pathbreaking scholarship pushes the boundaries of how transnational crime can be understood and studied, combining deep empirical insights with sophisticated and diverse methodological approaches.
The team leads a seasoned staff of researchers and academics who are well-regarded in their respective fields and bring their knowledge and expertise to George Mason classrooms.
CONTRA presents a great opportunity to nurture cutting-edge scholarship on topics of crucial import to the future of democracy and security, said Wedel, a pioneer of applying anthropological insights to corruption.
This is such a great opportunity to contribute to the study of different forms of transnational crime and illicit networks from an interdisciplinary perspective and using complex methodologies in the areas of data analysis and machine learning, said Correa-Cabrera, an internationally recognized expert on immigration and border security. Working with Janine and Naoru, this will be possible.
For her part, Koizumi is looking forward to learning from each other, collaborating with more faculty, and furthering this important area of international security research.
The center will launch its public programming with From Cartels to Combatants: The Intense Militarization of Americas Drug War on Monday, March 23, from 1 to 6 p.m. at FUSE 1311 at Mason Square. The conference will examine the impacts of the designation of transnational criminal organizations as Foreign Terrorist Organizations and assess the legal, diplomatic, operational, and strategic consequences of that shift.
. For questions, contact contra@gmu.edu.
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