Abstract

ABSTRACTPrivate military and security companies (PMSCs) are increasingly contracted to provide security in international peacekeeping missions. Yet, we know very little about the practical implications of this development. How do PMSCs reinforce and shape security management within UN peacekeeping operations, and what are the consequences for UN missions and their host populations? To answer these questions, we explore the operational, representative and regulatory security practices in the UN operation in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUSCO). Our findings show how seemingly uncontroversial, even benign security practices can have unintended negative consequences. Specifically, we observe that the participation of security firms in MONUSCO's security management contributes to three developments: the differentiation of security between staff and locals, the hardening of MONUSCO's security posture, and the perpetuation of insecurity through the emergence of a local security economy. Contracted security is thus involved in reproducing forms of security that are in some ways diametrically opposed to the aims of the mission to protect civilians and facilitate a sustainable peace.

Highlights

  • The contracting of commercial military and security services in support of multilateral peacekeeping operations has been one of the focal points of the contestations surrounding the rapid growth of Private Military and Security Companies (PMSCs)

  • We aim to answer two questions: How do contractors shape security management within UN peacekeeping operations, and what are the consequences for the security of mission staff and host populations? These questions call for two caveats

  • PMSCs are involved in reproducing forms of security that are in some ways diametrically opposed to the aims of the mission to protect civilians, reduce the place of armed insecurity and facilitate a sustainable peace.[32]

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Summary

Introduction

The contracting of commercial military and security services in support of multilateral peacekeeping operations has been one of the focal points of the contestations surrounding the rapid growth of Private Military and Security Companies (PMSCs). While contracting has been taking place in UN missions we have very limited knowledge of its practical implications in the field It took until 2010 for the UN Working Group on Mercenaries to report in an official UN document that the UN itself was ‘using the services of private military and security personnel in some of the conflict zones in which it is engaged’.4.

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