
Oxford University Press, 2009
Edited by Simon Chesterman & Angelina Fisher
Private actors are
increasingly taking on roles traditionally arrogated to the state. Both in the
industrialized North and the developing South, functions essential to external
and internal security and to the satisfaction of basic human needs are
routinely contracted out to non-state agents. In the area of privatization of
security functions, attention by academics and policy makers tends to focus on
the activities of private military and security companies, especially in the
context of armed conflicts, and their impact on human rights and post-conflict
stability and reconstruction. The first edited volume emerging from New York University
School of Law's Institute for International Justice project on private military
and security companies, From
Mercenaries to Market: The Rise and Regulation of Private Military Companies broadened
this debate to situate the private military phenomenon in the context of moves
towards the regulation of activities through market and non-market mechanisms.
Where that first volume looked at the emerging market for force, this second
volume looks at the transformations in the nature of state authority. Drawing
on insights from work on privatization, regulation, and accountability in the
emerging field of global administrative law, the book examines private military
and security companies through the wider lens of private actors performing
public functions. In the past two decades, the responsibilities delegated to
such actors - especially but not only in the United States - have grown
exponentially. The central question of this volume is whether there should be
any limits on government capacity to outsource traditionally "public"
functions. Can and should a government put out to private tender the fulfilment
of military, intelligence, and prison services? Can and should it transfer
control of utilities essential to life, such as the supply of water? This
discussion incorporates numerous perspectives on regulatory and governance
issues in the private provision of public functions, but focuses primarily on
private actors offering services that impact the fundamental rights of the
affected population.
Table of
Contents:
Introduction — Simon Chesterman & Angelina Fisher (available online)
1. The privatization of violence — Michael Likosky
2. The responsibility of states — Olivier De Schutter
3. Accountability to whom? — Angelina Fisher
Part II: Lessons from other sectors
4. The privatization continuum — Daphne Barak-Erez
5. Private prisons and the democratic deficit — Alfred C. Aman, Jr.
6. Regulatory choices in the privatization of infrastructure — Mariana Mota Prado
7. Human rights and self-regulation in the apparel industry — Rebecca DeWinter-Schmitt
Part III: Limits
8. Police informants — Jacqueline Ross
9. Intelligence services — Simon Chesterman
10. Peacekeeping — Chia Lehnardt
11. Conclusion: Private security, public order — Simon Chesterman & Angelina Fisher
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