Conveniently structured into five sections, The Routledge Research Companion to Outsourcing Security offers an overview of the different ways in which states have come to rely on private contrators to support interventions.
Joakim Berndtsson is a Associate Professor at the School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
Christopher Kinsey is Reader in Business & International Security at Kings College London, UK.
Introduction, Joakim Berndtsson and Christopher Kinsey
Part I: The Outsourcing Context: the Evolution of Security Outsourcing
1. Supporting the Troops: Military Contracting in the United States, Martha Lizabeth Phelps
2. Outsourcing Military Logistics and Security Services: the Case of the UK, Christopher Kinsey
3. Dissecting Military and Security Outsourcing in Canada's Expeditionary Culture: Afghanistan and the Future, Christopher Spearin
4. Coercion and Capital in Afghanistan: The Rise, Transformation and Fall of the Afghan Commercial Security Sector, Christian Olsson
5. A "Pacifist" Approach to Military Contracting: How German History Explains its Limited Use of Private Security Companies, Birthe Anders
Part II: Theorising Security Outsourcing
6. The Evolution of Private Force, Sean McFate
7. Money for nothing? Contractor Support from an Economic Perspective, Eugenio Cusumano
8. Critical Perspectives on Military Markets, Anna Leander
9. Outsourcing and Risk: From the Known to the Unknown, Elke Krahmann
10. Merchants of Security: Private Security Companies, Strategy and the Quest for Power, Marcus Mohlin
Part III: The Law, Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility of Outsourcing Security
11. Contractors and the Law of Armed Conflict, Malcolm H Patterson
12. Contract Law as Cover: Curtailing the Scope of Private Military and Security Contractor Responsibilities, Hin-Yan Liu
13. Socially Responsible Security Providers? Analysing Norm Internalisation among Private Security Providers, Aileen Acheson
14. Regulating Human Rights in the Context of Outsourcing Military Logistics and Armed Security, Sorcha MacLeod
15. Democratic States, War and Private Security Companies: The Ethical Puzzles, Mervyn Frost
16. The Contractor as the New Cosmopolitan Soldier, Andreas Krieg
17. Is it Ethical for States to Prevent their Citizens from Working as TCN Military and Security Contractors?, Deane-Peter Baker
Part IV: Armed Security Contractors and Military Contractors: Drivers, Politics and Consequences
18. What is driving the Outsourcing of Diplomatic Security?, Eugenio Cusumano and Christopher Kinsey
19. Reconfiguring Power and Insecurity in the Afghan context: The Consequences of Outsourcing Security in High Risk Societies, Ase Gilje Østensen
20. Industry and Support to UK Contemporary Military Operations: A Practitioner's Strategic Military Perspective, David Shouesmith
21. The Politics of Outsourcing Military Support Services, Mark Erbel
22. The Consequences of Outsourcing Military Support Functions, Molly Dunigan
Part V: Emerging Perspectives: Issues of Gender, Military Professionals, and Maritime Private Security
23. The Culture of Whiteness in Private Security, Amanda Chisholm
24. The Issue of Gender and Armed Contractors, Jutta Joachim and Andrea Schneiker
25. Security Outsourcing And Critical Feminist Inquiry: Taking Stock and Looking Forward, Maria Stern
26. Private Maritime Security: Assemblage in a Space of Exception, Alexander Gould
27. Private Security, Military Professionals and the State, Joakim Berndtsson
Conclusion, Joakim Berndtsson and Christopher Kinsey