RT Article T1 Why lawyers internationalize and police transnationalize: disjointed criminal justice at the border of the state JF Crime, law and social change VO 77 IS 1 SP 27 OP 46 A1 Christensen, Mikkel Jarle LA English YR 2022 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1824464681 AB This article investigates the socio-genesis of two different types of criminal justice developed at the border of the state. At this border, the field of international criminal justice was differentiated from the field of transnational criminal justice. The article analyzes how elites of these two fields are characterized by distinct relations to the state that structure their ability to affect criminal justice outside of the national context. These professionals worked in parallel in national systems of justice where they accumulated distinct patterns of expertise and access to the state. On the basis of these socio-professional differences, law and police professionals helped define new criminal justice initiatives at the border of the state that deepened the division between them. The development of international criminal justice was dominated by professionals of law whereas transnational criminal justice was built primarily around police professionals. Societal responses to globalized crime are structured by this disjointed space of criminal justice in which legal and police professionals dominate distinct enforcement initiatives. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 43-46 K1 Internationalisierung K1 Grenze K1 Konzept K1 Polizei K1 Rechtswissenschaft DO 10.1007/s10611-021-09965-y