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Journal ArticleDOI

Security Beyond the State: Global Security Assemblages in International Politics

TLDR
In this article, the role of private security in two such assemblages in Sierra Leone and Nigeria is analyzed, showing how a range of different security agents and normativities interact, cooperate and compete, to produce new institutions, practices and forms of security governance.
Abstract
To date, most discussion of security privatization in international politics has been focused on the role of private military companies and mercenaries. This article seeks to shift the focus away from the battlefields and toward the less spectacular privatization and globalization of commercial private security. Drawing on Saskia Sassen’s notion of state ‘‘disassembly,’’ we situate the growth of private security within broader shifts in global governance. Pointing to the weakness of seeing the rise of private security as an erosion of state power and authority, we show instead a re-articulation of the public ⁄private and global ⁄local distinctions and relationships into what we term ‘‘global security assemblages.’’ Analyzing the role of private security in two such assemblages in Sierra Leone and Nigeria, we show how a range of different security agents and normativities interact, cooperate and compete, to produce new institutions, practices and forms of security governance. Global security assemblages thus mark important developments in the relationship between security and the sovereign state, structures of political power and authority, and the operations of global capital. Spurred by the apparent return of mercenary activities in Africa at the end of the Cold War, and given further impetus and urgency by the substantial involvement of private military contractors in Afghanistan and Iraq, the privatization of security has become one of the most controversial issues in contemporary international politics. Once obscure companies such as Blackwater, Triple Canopy, and Erinys have joined with tales of ‘‘neo-mercenaries’’ like Executive Outcomes in Sierra Leone and Simon Mann’s attempted coup in Equatorial Guinea in 2004, to become the focus of widespread journalistic coverage, increasingly sophisticated scholarly analysis, as well as popular books, entertainment and Hollywood films. Yet the privatization of security and its consequences go well beyond the activities of the private soldier. Away from the battlefields, in the day-to-day activities of ordinary life, private security has also become ubiquitous. Less spectacular than the ‘‘return of the dogs of war,’’ commercial private security activities, ranging from manned guarding and alarm installation, to risk analysis and surveillance, have expanded at a phenomenal rate. Worldwide, the commercial private security market is now valued at $165 billion, and its growth is forecast to continue at an annual rate of 8% for the foreseeable future (Securitas 2007). Indeed, what was once described as a ‘‘quiet revolution’’ in security provision has become global in scope (Shearing and Stenning 1981).

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Citations
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Pathways to practice: praxiography and international politics

TL;DR: The methodological implications of the practice turn are discussed in this paper, where it is argued that the practice focus does not only imply a certain "theory" but also a certain methodology.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Conduct of Inquiry in International Relations

TL;DR: The conduct of inquiry in international relations has been studied extensively in the literature, see as discussed by the authors for an overview. But this work is limited to the case of international relations, see, e.g.,
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Public–private partnerships (ppps) in global health: the good, the bad and the ugly

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that public-private partnerships have contributed to the emergence of a complex global health governance architecture in which private solutions (market mechanism) are generally privileged over public approaches.
Journal ArticleDOI

Questioning security devices: Performativity, resistance, politics

TL;DR: A special issue proposing an analytics of devices to examine the configuration and reconfiguration of security practices by attending to the equipment or instrumentation that make these practices possible and temporally stabilize them is introduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Liquid Surveillance: The Contribution of Zygmunt Bauman to Surveillance Studies

TL;DR: The great virtue of Zygmunt Bauman's work for surveillance studies is that he engages several tasks: he contextualizes what might be called liquid surveillance within the major movements of modern society, recognizes the significance of changing forms of surveillance to the production of social order, encourages serious consideration of the lived realities of in ⁄ visibility, refuses to accept monocausal explanations of the surveillant vision and dynamic, and confronts courageously the ethical and political challenges that surveillance now presents to our world as discussed by the authors.
References
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Book

Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages

Saskia Sassen
TL;DR: Saskia Sassen as discussed by the authors has focused on the unexpected and the counterintuitive as a way to cut through established "truths" and has received a variety of awards and prizes, most recently, a Doctor honoris causa from Delft University (Netherlands), and was one of the four winners of the first University of Chicago Future Mentor Award covering all doctoral programs.
Book

Policing the Risk Society

TL;DR: The Fraser Institute has brought together an interesting volume that seems to bear the message of Adam Egoyan's movie The Sweet Hereafter; namely, that lawyers as ambulance-chasers are bad news as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Power in international politics

TL;DR: The authors argue that scholars of international relations should employ multiple conceptions of power and develop a conceptual framework that encourages rigorous attention to power in its different forms, and illustrate how attention to the multiple forms of power matters for the analysis of global governance and American empire.
Book

The culture of control

David Garland
Posted Content

Introduction to Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages

TL;DR: Sassen as discussed by the authors argues that even while globalization is best understood as "denationalization," it continues to be shaped, channeled, and enabled by institutions and networks originally developed with nations in mind, such as the rule of law and respect for private authority.
Trending Questions (1)
What effect does populism have on international security?

The provided paper does not discuss the effect of populism on international security. The paper focuses on the privatization and globalization of commercial private security.