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Article
Private Force/Public Goods
Connecticut Law Review
  • Scott M. Sullivan, Louisiana State University Law Center
Abstract

This Article rethinks the benefits and dangers of private force in war. It shows that privatization must be viewed within the special requirements and confines of national security policy making and weighed against available alternatives. Contrary to academic and mainstream conventional wisdom, this Article concludes that national security privatization comports well with core constitutional and democratic principles and offers greater transparency and democratic control than commonly understood. Moreover, this Article argues that the American use of privatized force reflects and accomplishes normative and democratic commitments of international and domestic law that would be impossible to replicate through other policy avenues.

Comments

42 Conn. L. Rev. 853 (2010)

Disciplines
Keywords
  • Private military companies,
  • National security,
  • Government policy,
  • Government accountability
Date of Authorship for this Version
1-1-2010
Citation Information
Scott M. Sullivan. "Private Force/Public Goods" Connecticut Law Review (2010)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/scott_sullivan/5/