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The Logic of Security Markets: Security Governance in Failed States

Cover: Security Dialogue, 42 (6)

Cover: Security Dialogue, 42 (6)

Sven Chojnacki, Željko Branović – 2011

This article presents a theoretical framework with which to discuss how non-state modes of security governance evolve in the context of state failure and/or collapse. To address this issue, we present the logic of security markets, which assumes that the evolution of security governance by non-state groups in failed states is a function of both resource availability and the strategies that armed groups apply to extract resources from the civilian population. Axiomatically, we expect that in the short term the central purpose for the use of force is survival and achieving the ability to finance one’s capabilities to use force, although ultimately this also includes the seizure and control of territory. The main argument is that the changing competitive conditions in security markets – which we measure in terms of the total number of violent groups and their organizational design, size and strength – explain the rationales behind the decisions of armed groups either to use violence against the civilian population or to invest in the provision of security.

Title
The Logic of Security Markets: Security Governance in Failed States
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Location
London
Keywords
armed groups, fragile states, Research Project C2
Date
2011
Source(s)
Appeared in
Security Dialogue, 42 (6), 553-569.
Language
eng
Type
Text