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Resource August 18, 2017

Meet the Journalists: Matt Kennard and Claire Provost

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Israeli private security guards chat with Israel Defence Force (IDF) soldiers behind the bars at Qalandia checkpoint. Image by Matt Kennard. West Bank, 2016.
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A massive army has been built up around the world, not to fight traditional wars, but to protect...

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Murals of Palestinians killed by Israel decorate the walls around Qalandia village near the checkpoint. Image by Matt Kennard. West Bank, 2016.
Murals of Palestinians killed by Israel decorate the walls around Qalandia village near the checkpoint. Image by Matt Kennard. West Bank, 2016.

During the War on Terror, the rise of private military contractors (PMCs) became an international story, with their exploits in Afghanistan and particularly Iraq filling column inches in newspapers across the world and spurring a host of bestselling books. The reason was obvious: this was a new trend that raised all sorts of questions about the accountability mechanisms for the use of force in the modern era, as well as the future of the military as an institution.

But what was ignored and lost in the hype about Blackwater and Dyncorp was the fact that these companies, and many others like them, had been expanding rapidly all over the world well before the War on Terror, often operating in states that were not at war.

A massive corporate army has been built up around the world, not to fight traditional wars, but to protect assets and help in disciplining local populations. From Chiquita in Colombia, allegedly paying paramilitaries and private security corporations to kill opponents of their programs, to G4S manning Israeli checkpoints, the corporate takeover of security operations for some of the biggest companies (and states) is a story that is sure to dominate the future.

Globally, the role and power of private military and private security companies have exploded over the last two decades. Some say these shifts have fundamentally challenged the monopoly on force, defense, and security seen as a core tenet of state sovereignty. In this project, Matt Kennard and Claire Provost examine an industry that deals in services that have long been considered duties of national police and military forces—from the training of local patrol officers to the management of prisons, maritime security, surveillance, and investigations.

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