ABSTRACT

In the field of policing private governments range from corporate entities who promote security within commercial, residential, industrial, and recreational complexes to ones that regulate financial markets. In Britain, for instance, prior to the eighteenth century rule from the center was accomplished in large part via a formula in which the center delegated responsibility for governance to the sub-political centers of feudalism. Even within a conception of governance that regards the provision of security as quintessentially a state function, for example R. Nozick's minimal state, a market mentality of what the state should be providing to its citizens leads not to police but to security. With the growth of private security, the machinery of policing and its control has shifted to the level of political sub-centers, while the attempts to mobilize civil resources by the state through a range of police initiatives has led to a "societalization of the state".