
In a world dominated by nation-states, expressions of private violence have generally been neglected: either as relics of a more disorganised world or as marginal nuisances to states themselves. The prevalence and centrality of private violence in the past and present warns against such complacency. An increasing academic interest in "non-state" or private violence in International Relations has been mirrored in the world of policy as terrorists, insurgents, private military companies, and more recently pirates, have all become the focus of international security. Despite the increasing interest, the historical analysis of such actors has not been at a premium. This volume seeks to rectify this gap. Setting private violence in an historical context the contributors consider the development of private violence in time, as well as offering a comparative analysis of its unfolding across different geographical planes. The nine chapters that form the volume critically explore the lives of pirates, privateers, mercenaries, warlords, bandits and smugglers--groups of men (and occasionally women) that have sustained themselves and their kin principally through recourse to violence, but generally from outside or on the margins of public, state authority. They underline ways in which private violence acts both as a threat to existing forms of social order, and as a vehicle of empowerment for the established political authorities.
This volume investigates the historical role and persistence of private violence as a significant, yet often overlooked, force operating outside the traditional framework of the nation-state. Alejandro Colas and his contributors challenge the assumption that private violence is merely a relic of the past or a marginal nuisance to modern governance. By examining the development of non-state actors across various geographical and temporal contexts, the authors argue that private violence remains a central, albeit complex, element of international security and political authority.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this volume as a significant contribution to the historical study of International Relations, particularly for its focus on actors typically relegated to the periphery of state-centric analysis. Readers often note that the text provides a necessary academic bridge between historical inquiry and contemporary security policy.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2010-12-22
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199327297
ISBN-13:
9780199327294
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