Private military and security companies (PMSCs) are a fast-growing global industry. While the rise of PMSCs and their activities have attracted much media coverage and growing scholarly attention, little is known about their sourcing of masses of military labour from the global South. This exploratory study examines the case of Fiji, whose thousands of ex/current disciplinary force personnel and unemployed men have been contracted by PMSCs to provide security work in Iraq and other high-conflict areas. The article shows this to be an instance of unequal core-periphery military labour trade, outlining its scale, processes and impacts on the migrants. It also illuminates how the migrants’ collective agency is demonstrated even under powerful ...
This thesis addresses the phenomenon of short-term labour migration between Fiji and New Zealand th...
Privatisation of security did not appear in the process of revolution. Under conditions of deepening...
The article analyses how the norm against mercenarism shapes the legitimate parameters of exchange ...
Private military and security companies (PMSCs) are a fast-growing global industry. While the rise ...
Nic Maclellan reports that over 1000 Fijians are working in Iraq and Kuwait as soldiers, security gu...
Private military and security companies (PMSCs) are established actors in the global militaryindustr...
Since the invasion of Iraq in 2003, private security companies from the United Kingdom and United St...
This article examines the involvement of Private Military and Security Companies (PMSCs) in both sha...
This dataset is from detailed ethnographic semi-structured interviews I conducted with Gurkhas wives...
9 Abstract The industry of Private military companies has been one of the most progressive sectors w...
The post-Cold War era has seen the emergence of the Private Military Company (PMC), corporate organi...
In contradistinction to the traditional soldier of fortune contemporary Private Military Firms (PMFs...
Private military companies have rapidly filled in many operational force capacities that national mi...
The article explores the interactions between transnational labour migration, multinational corporat...
Fijian bodies have become a valuable commodity in the economy of war. Remittances from workers overs...
This thesis addresses the phenomenon of short-term labour migration between Fiji and New Zealand th...
Privatisation of security did not appear in the process of revolution. Under conditions of deepening...
The article analyses how the norm against mercenarism shapes the legitimate parameters of exchange ...
Private military and security companies (PMSCs) are a fast-growing global industry. While the rise ...
Nic Maclellan reports that over 1000 Fijians are working in Iraq and Kuwait as soldiers, security gu...
Private military and security companies (PMSCs) are established actors in the global militaryindustr...
Since the invasion of Iraq in 2003, private security companies from the United Kingdom and United St...
This article examines the involvement of Private Military and Security Companies (PMSCs) in both sha...
This dataset is from detailed ethnographic semi-structured interviews I conducted with Gurkhas wives...
9 Abstract The industry of Private military companies has been one of the most progressive sectors w...
The post-Cold War era has seen the emergence of the Private Military Company (PMC), corporate organi...
In contradistinction to the traditional soldier of fortune contemporary Private Military Firms (PMFs...
Private military companies have rapidly filled in many operational force capacities that national mi...
The article explores the interactions between transnational labour migration, multinational corporat...
Fijian bodies have become a valuable commodity in the economy of war. Remittances from workers overs...
This thesis addresses the phenomenon of short-term labour migration between Fiji and New Zealand th...
Privatisation of security did not appear in the process of revolution. Under conditions of deepening...
The article analyses how the norm against mercenarism shapes the legitimate parameters of exchange ...