Private Military Firms (PMFs) have recently stepped in to fill the growing global demand for temporary, highly-specialized military services. These private corporations can be a blessing to their client countries in that they offer many economic, military, and political benefits not ordinarily found in standing armies. However, PMFs fall within a gap in international law, which presumes and prefers a monopolization of force by state actors, thereby leaving no effective way to deal with those PMFs that commit human rights abuses. This Note traces the history of private militaries and the applicable legal standards and argues for a coordinated domestic approach among a handful of countries to legitimize and regulate PMFs
This Article argues that there is an [a]ccountability gap within the legal frameworks that apply to ...
The international legal system has weathered sweeping changes during last decades as new actors have...
Member States of the United Nations (U.N.) are responsible for taking appropriate measures to preven...
Private Military Firms (PMFs) have recently stepped in to fill the growing global demand for tempora...
The Article addresses the legal issues raised by the ascendance of contemporary Private Military Fir...
One of the serious problems that the new administration faces is undoubtedly the regulation and use ...
In the aftermath of the Cold war, new actors began to carry out a wide range of tasks with regard to...
The end of the Cold War witnessed the growth and spread of legally established private military cont...
Efforts to establish regulatory frameworks for private military/security companies (PMSCs), driven b...
This thesis investigates the moral permissibility of military privatization. My analysis focuses on ...
In contradistinction to the traditional soldier of fortune contemporary Private Military Firms (PMFs...
Since wars have existed, there have been soldiers for hire. As the state evolved, originating during...
Private security and military companies have become a ubiquitous part of modern armed conflict and p...
The “war on terrorism,” according to Jeremy Scahill, has led to the most privatized war in the histo...
Controversial cases such as the aborted coup in Equatorial Guinea and the employment of private cont...
This Article argues that there is an [a]ccountability gap within the legal frameworks that apply to ...
The international legal system has weathered sweeping changes during last decades as new actors have...
Member States of the United Nations (U.N.) are responsible for taking appropriate measures to preven...
Private Military Firms (PMFs) have recently stepped in to fill the growing global demand for tempora...
The Article addresses the legal issues raised by the ascendance of contemporary Private Military Fir...
One of the serious problems that the new administration faces is undoubtedly the regulation and use ...
In the aftermath of the Cold war, new actors began to carry out a wide range of tasks with regard to...
The end of the Cold War witnessed the growth and spread of legally established private military cont...
Efforts to establish regulatory frameworks for private military/security companies (PMSCs), driven b...
This thesis investigates the moral permissibility of military privatization. My analysis focuses on ...
In contradistinction to the traditional soldier of fortune contemporary Private Military Firms (PMFs...
Since wars have existed, there have been soldiers for hire. As the state evolved, originating during...
Private security and military companies have become a ubiquitous part of modern armed conflict and p...
The “war on terrorism,” according to Jeremy Scahill, has led to the most privatized war in the histo...
Controversial cases such as the aborted coup in Equatorial Guinea and the employment of private cont...
This Article argues that there is an [a]ccountability gap within the legal frameworks that apply to ...
The international legal system has weathered sweeping changes during last decades as new actors have...
Member States of the United Nations (U.N.) are responsible for taking appropriate measures to preven...