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Comparative-Models-in-Policing

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Comparative Models in Policing (Globalization)
Criminal law is a system that upholds the highest standards and principles. In fact, the necessity of
these regulations becomes increasingly evident to everyone when the criminal protection of legal values is
elevated in the form of criminal titles. When human values and global human rights are linked, the mission
of criminal law becomes even more essential, because some of the values of global human rights are also
part of criminal law, and so protection of them has been given to both parts of the law in the age of
globalization. Part of these supports falls under the jurisdiction of criminal law, while others fall under the
jurisdiction of human rights.
The dread of crime has grown among residents as a result of a significant number of criminal titles
associated with cyberspace. It's also worth mentioning the topic of crime prevention and the consequences
of worldwide crime enforcement, which has given criminal law a security aspect. The reason for this is that
criminal law has infiltrated almost every aspect of life. Today, crime prevention tools serve the same
purpose. Various disciplines of crime prevention have emerged as a result of the evolution of crime
prevention, leading to the creation of security space in societies. As a result, the police have invaded
cyberspace, claiming that worldwide crime cybercrimes such as cyber-terrorism, organized cybercrime,
and other forms of cybercrime are on the rise, necessitating a response from the armed forces.
The huge anti-crime apparatus used by the police, whether in the real world or in cyberspace, is
undeniably the same, and the police will play the same role in cybercrime prevention. Indeed, police
measures are merely a broad policy of facing other crimes, but what distinguishes this region is the specific
characteristics of cybercrime, which necessitates its own implementation methods in order to accomplish
this general policy.
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