6 research outputs found

    The Grizzly, May 3, 1985

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    Reimert Hall Will Welcome Girls in the Fall • Fraternities Are Still Alive at Ursinus • Ursinus Applicants Improve • Letters: Greek Week Disappointing; Radio Offers Thanks • Drinking Age of 21 Should Not Be a Standard • Profile: Dr. Coggers Says Farewell • Greek Week\u27s Final Results • Lacrosse Looks to Repeat Division III Title • Successful Year for Lacrosse Club • Gasser Retires • Sally Grim Shines As Star Pitcher • Griffin Worth Far More than Gold • Trackmen Head to MAC\u27s • Stormy Baver is Pilot Behind the Plate • Golf Team Optimistic • Visit the Writing Center • 1985 Baseball Wraps it Up • 1985 Lacrosse Stats • St. Joseph\u27s M.B.A Courses Offered at Ursinus • Open Dialog On Intervention • Area Residents Share College Memories • Shorts: Faculty Members to Retire; Open Dialog; Color Analysis Held on Campus; Evening Concert Announced; Voices ; Art Show • Dead Kennedys • WVOU Conducts Survey • Luau on Sat. • Weekend Highlights • It Will Be a Fantasy Weekendhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1142/thumbnail.jp

    Organized crime and the environment

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    It has been recognized for some time that the liberalization of trade policies has had deleterious impacts on the world’s natural environment. The rapid expansion of globalized goods and services continues to create a human footprint with longlasting environmental consequences (White 2010). It is a footprint that represents rapid human activity and with it has come new commercial opportunities, not only for global businesses but also for organized criminal networks. Both the acceleration and by-products of global trade have created new markets as well as underground economies. As the opening quotation reveals, transnational environmental crime must become a policing priority as organized criminal..
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