Assessing Iran's criminal policy against armed drug and psychotropic trafficking from a social security perspective.

Document Type : Original Article

Authors

1 Instructor / School of Economics and Accounting

2 Assistant Professor / Azad University, South Tehran Branch

3 Vice Chancellor for Research / South Tehran Azad University

Abstract

Social security is one of the most important demands of citizens from the government. This article seeks to examine the realization of social security in Iran's criminal policy against armed drug and psychotropic trafficking. This knowledge-word is understood in the absence of threat. Requirements for achieving social security in the fight against armed drug trafficking are constantly updating Iran's criminal policy approaches in this regard, considering how to respond to this crime in the light of social surveys and the fight against government crimes in the realm of responding to it. Cognitive subcultural conflicts, distrust of the capabilities of the criminal justice system, the growing fear of crime and its spread to armed drug trafficking, and the absolute execution of some citizens in drug crimes are the most important challenges of this goal. Strategies for managing these challenges include updating the fight against armed drug trafficking, raising public awareness of the dangers of crime, and managing fear of crime. Victory in this way has had constructive consequences with the globalization of criminology. This study has found that appropriate criminal policy against armed drug trafficking leads to a clear sustainability of social security. The focus of this reaction is also on how to issue and implement the death penalty for these perpetrators by looking at the views of public opinion in this regard.

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