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Private Security Companies: The Case for Regulation

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2005
SIPRI

The private provision of security and military services challenges conventional assumptions about the roles of the nation state as the main protagonist in military affairs and as the guarantor of physical security for its citizens. In the absence of effective legal or regulatory structures, such activities raise issues of legality, legitimacy and accountability in the sphere of security policy. This study assesses the impact of 'the privatization of security' in various security contexts and examines some of the ways in which the international community might respond to this development.

Table of contents

1. Introduction

2. Private security in the weak state

3. Private security and the 'efficient' state

4. The global war on terrorism and privatization of security

5. International, regional and national responses

6. Conclusions: The limits of regulation

ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)/EDITORS