ABSTRACT

There is a sprawling scholarship on violence, crime, and corrupt state rule; yet few have interpreted these challenges as transformative at the global scale and as a potential source of alternative, non-state, legitimacy. This volume challenges "Westphalian conservativism" in a provocative yet plausible manner, shedding light at the ubiquity and diversity of unfolding non-state agendas and at their effect on the imagined state community.

Focusing on civil war parties, warlords, commercial providers of security, multinational companies and criminal organizations, the book directs attention to theoretical questions and policy challenges arising from non-state armed expansion. To accomplish this, the contributors present a range of case studies and comparisons within three thematic sections: the first takes stock of how, when, and in what measure state and state-system legitimacy are challenged by non-state violent or criminal activity; the second addresses the nature, effectiveness, and side-effects of different state-mandated reaction to non-state activities; and third focuses on the recombination of state and non-state actors contributing to processes of socio-political transformation.

This volume provides a current analysis of different armed and violent actors encroaching on the state's monopoly of violence. It seeks to spark debate about global political change and will be of interest to students and scholars of global governance, global security, and international relations.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

The Siege of Westphalia?

part I|72 pages

Challenging the state

chapter 2|15 pages

Back to the clan

Organized crime as state surrogate for the market

chapter 3|17 pages

Dispute resolution mechanisms provided by violent non-state actors

An international comparative analysis of causes and consequences

chapter 4|16 pages

Clausewitz in the boardroom

Legitimacy and hegemony

chapter 5|22 pages

New vortices of power

The alliance between transnational corporations and private military security corporations in the Katanga district of the Democratic Republic of the Congo

part II|52 pages

Defending the state

chapter 7|18 pages

The shifting territorial dimensions of crime-fighting

Rescaling state security to the sub-local level in Mexico City

chapter 8|17 pages

The privatization of counter-piracy

Implications for order at sea

part III|70 pages

Changing the state

chapter 9|16 pages

Between public and private

Reconstructing the field of security in post-communist Europe

chapter 11|16 pages

Debunking the stationary bandit myth

Violence and governance in statebuilding history

chapter 12|18 pages

Regardless of Clausewitz?

Classical strategic theory in a hybrid world

part |17 pages

Conclusion

chapter 13|15 pages

Non-state challenges

Nibbling on the edges or crunching on principles of the Westphalian order?