The contribution of border police in combating Organized Crime at the borders of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Keywords:
organized,, crime,, human rights, border police, control,, trafficking in persons.Abstract
The contribution of border police, the fight against organized crime, has the scientific challenges in proving the
general socially acceptable opinion that the work of border police in the countries arranged legal relations are
considered universally applicable moral principles which are beyond the traditional ideological divisions.
Simultaneously, the text starts from the fact that human rights are universal and the same all the countries. We
give special emphasis, human trafficking, where mainstream the Declaration on the Human Rights Council.
"Whereas recognition of the inherent dignity and equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family
is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world," in making this work, we went from the general
hypothesis that human rights are "universal" as referring to all people and not only to members of a particular
country, race, religion, gender or group. Given the insights that we got during the preparation of this work,
studying the phenomenon of trafficking in Central and Eastern Europe, was the fact that human trafficking has
certain specific characteristics that are typical for other forms of organized crime and concern primarily the
conceptual definition of this phenomenon, etiology, and geographical aspects of victimization. The problem of
human trafficking as a multidisciplinary category we have been studying several aspects of the sciences
(sociology, economics, anthropology, philosophy, psychology ...) and that the two approaches to the study; - Longitudinal, study the topic through its historical aspect of the world in general, and - Transversal, the study of topics at this time in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
As is the practice in most countries in the region and in BiH, many international organizations and institutions as
well as local non-governmental organizations have taken the responsibility of the joint fight against human
trafficking. The existence of multiple institutional entities outside of the legal analysis of state responsibility was a
fundamental challenge in our empirical section covering the topic of the thesis. Therefore, we are in the
aforementioned study on the practices define the roles of all those subject to service of our country's commitment
to all victims of organized crime in human trafficking.