The International State Crime Initiative (ISCI) is a cross-disciplinary research centre comprising a community of scholars working to further our understanding of state crime. By state crime we mean state organisational deviance resulting in human rights violations. This includes crimes committed, instigated or condoned by state agencies or by non-state entities that control substantial territory.
The concept of state crime includes but extends beyond legal categories of human rights abuse and international crime. Our focus is on victims as key actors in defining, exposing and challenging state violence and corruption. ISCI takes the term 'crime' to include all violations of human rights that are 'deviant' in the sense that they infringe some socially recognised norm.
ISCI is institutionally supported by Queen Mary University of London and partnered with Harvard University, the University of Hull and the University of Ulster.
ISCI's primary areas of research include:
In 2011 Professor Penny Green and Dr Tony Ward, ISCI's directors, were awarded an ESRC Standard Grant of £830,000 for a project entitled 'Resisting State Crime: A Comparative Study of Civil Society' (ES/I030816/1). For further information on the project please visit the ISCI research page.
ISCI's permanent staff team includes:
Click here for a full list of ISCI’s honorary fellows, members and researchers.
ISCI recently published the first issue of State Crime in conjunction with Pluto Journals.
State Crime is the first peer-reviewed, international journal that seeks to disseminate leading research on the illicit practices of states. The concept of state crime is not confined to legally recognised states but can include any authority that exerts political and military control over a substantial territory. The journal’s focus is a reflection of the growing awareness within criminology that state criminality is endemic and acts as a significant barrier to security and development.
The first edition includes Noam Chomsky's article 'Changing Contours of World Order', which he presented at the journal launch at King's College London last October.
For further information, including the contents of the first issue, and details regarding subscriptions and calls for papers, please visit the State Crime Journal page.
International State Crime Initiativec/o Penny GreenSchool of LawQueen Mary University of LondonMile End RoadLondon E1 4NS