WHAT IS A NON-STATE ACTOR?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction The present material is intended for general public use. All contents are available on the ICRC web-site: It may be viewed:
Advertisements

BUSINESS AND SECURITY What does that make you think of?
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AN INTRODUCTION 2011Sophie Kropman1.
Addressing migration success or failure… …by analyzing factors that effect human trafficking outcomes…
United States Army War College “Not to Promote War but to Foster Peace” Private Security Companies in Complex Contingencies: Opportunities and Risks A.
“Global Governance and Democratic Accountability” Robert O. Keohane Robert O. Keohane.
TERRORISM And how to tackle it. TERRORISM: THE USUAL CONFUSIONS ‘A new threat…’ - and aimed at the West ‘One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom.
Private Military and Security Companies ATHA Specialized Training on International Humanitarian Law June 1, 2010 Stockholm, Sweden.
WHAT IS A NON-STATE ACTOR? 22 January ARE WE SURE WHAT A STATE ACTOR IS? Modern conception: A Government (An inter-governmental institution, esp.
Private Military Firms The First Four Thousand Years The History of Terrorism as a Strategy of Political Insurgency.
21 November, 2011 Presentation by Daniel H. Levine to the Ghana Armed Forces Civil-Military Relations: Concepts and Issues.
World Studies.  Any large scale, violent conflict.  Usually between large, trained armies with advanced weapons  War can also mean a struggle against.
Operační program Vzdělávání pro konkurenceschopnost Název projektu: Inovace magisterského studijního programu Fakulty ekonomiky a managementu Registrační.
CONFLICT SETTLEMENT AND PEACE-BUILDING With special reference to the challenges of non-state actors.
World History/ Geo October 26 th, 2015 WARM UP: HOW MANY COUNTRIES ARE THERE IN THE WORLD?
 War  Guerrilla war  Terrorism  Coups d’état  Assassination  Economic/property damage  Sabotage  Riot Continuum 1.
NON-STATE ACTORS IN WORLD POLITICS
The State of Security in Yemen… Great Challenges and Inherent Weaknesses.
Chapter 4 Scanning the Marketing Environment Chapter 4 Scanning the Marketing Environment STEP????
Presented by Heo, jinsook
Tasks and Functions of government The first aim of government is to secure the right to life; this comprehends the safety of fellow citizens as regards.
WORKING WITH CIVIL SOCIETY. CIVIL SOCIETY ACTORS Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) Quasi-Autonomous Non Governmental Organizations (QANGOs) Religious.
CJS 250 Week 8 DQ 1 And DQ 2 Week 8 DQ 1 Security professionals have similar functions and duties as the police, but do not share the same level of authority.
4 DEPOSITS IN BANKS 4.1 Deposit Accounts 4.2 Interest-Bearing Accounts
Commentary - terms and planning premises
The Challenge of Civil Society to Authoritarian Regimes
The State, The Nation and The Nation State
Chapter 33 entrepreneurial concepts Section 33.1 Entrepreneurship
ROMANIAN ACADEMIC SOCIETY
1- Introduction ii-. Part ONE : foreign and security policy.
Democracy & Totalitarianism
Collectivism & Individualism in the Real World
ICT In Civil Society IB HL.
Chapter 2 Economic Systems & the American Economy
KARL MARX: BUREAUCRACY AND BEYOND
The Concept of Civil Society and Its Historical Development
Renovation: Preventing Corruption within Security Forces
International Law What.
Political Power and Globalization.
PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW TERRORISM AND ISLAM
KARL MARX: BUREAUCRACY AND BEYOND
INTRODUCTION TO CORPORATE GOVERNANCE.
Major international instruments on counteracting corruption and organized crime, ratified by Bulgaria UN Convention against Corruption; Council of Europe.
Modern world today There are a lot of internal and international conflicts all over the world. Force methods are often used and have high effectiveness.
The Concept of Civil Society and Its Historical Development
WHAT IS A NON-STATE ACTOR?
Lessons for the 21st Century
Political Systems.
Political Systems.
Do Now: How would you define terrorism? Please give examples that demonstrate your definition.
Who Can, Will, and Should Protect Nature?
Chapter four The subjects of public international law
Protecting Individual Rights
FLINGA CODE: FPLQ9SW.
OVERLOOKED LESSONS FOR 21ST CENTURY CONFLICT
Chapter 19 Transnational actors and international organizations in global politics Name: MA XINYUE Student No.:ID02403 Student No.:ID02403.
Partition To divide; break into parts
President of the Russian Association of International Law
Topic 1. International Organizations: history, types, definitions
Kazuto Suzuki Hokkaido University
4 DEPOSITS IN BANKS 4.1 Deposit Accounts 4.2 Interest-Bearing Accounts
INSPECT.
Conference On Improving Domestic Resource Mobilization (DRM) and Stemming Illicit Financial Flows (IFFs) 12th-15th March 2019, Nairobi Kenya Presented.
POL 100 International and Domestic Security
The 1648 Treaty of Westphalia?
EU Law and Policy Dr. Mahamat K. Dodo European Union Center Pusan National University Produced: April 4, 2013.
Introduction to IHL: Application and Basic Principles
Developing a statistical framework
CIVIL - MILITARY CO-OPERATION IN THE EMERGING SECURITY LANDSCAPE
DEFINING THE CONCEPT OF TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS
Presentation transcript:

WHAT IS A NON-STATE ACTOR?

ARE WE SURE WHAT A STATE ACTOR IS? Modern conception: A Government (An inter-governmental institution, esp. if it has its own legal base) Military forces maintained by a government Police forces maintained by a government Civilians employed by a government (Local government authorities)

BUT..... Historical complications: partial/unclear statehood, armies used to be commercially recruited, some officials worked as ‘farmers’ Ethical complications: state authorities not necessarily ‘recognized’, legitimate, or generally ‘good’ Practical complications: what is called a ‘government’ may not act like one or be the real one in a ‘weak’ state

PRIVATIZATION ETC A state authority may ‘sell’ a function that it formerly controlled - privatization It may share the costs with private funders but keep a share in control – PPP It may purchase a service from a non-state supplier rather than doing it itself – outsourcing It may delegate tasks ad hoc

TYPES OF NON-STATE ACTORS [Supranational organizations] (Multinational) business corporations Terrorist and criminal networks Factions in an internal conflict (Multinational) NGOs (Multinational) civil society networks Ordinary people – you and me

TYPICAL NON-STATE FEATURES Self-motivating and self-resourcing Free choice of structure or no structure (often) ‘transnational’ operation/impact: -information access -information flows -equipment+technology access -cross-border movement -network building and ‘franchising’

TYPICAL PROBLEMS OF CONTROL National and international laws do not ‘bite’ unless drafted to apply to such actors (and to take account of their characteristics) Problems of direct coercion, deterrence or ‘defeat’ Problems of direct negotiation+agreement Problems of tracking and controlling resource flows (multinationals, money laundering, terrorist finance, gun running etc)

ON THE OTHER HAND.... Non-state security activity can: - Make up for weaknesses of non-functioning state, empower individuals - Defend against a dysfunctional state - Support and supplement the state esp in newer security dimensions (+ subsidiarity) - Find transnational solutions for transnational/global processes (modernity, flexibility) - Share and ease resource burdens

‘GOOD’ OR ‘BAD’? What is our instinctive classification of - Multinationals? - Business in general? - Terrorist groups and networks? - Criminals and their networks? - National and international NGOS? - National and international civil society networks: a) religious, b) other? - Individuals playing a security role?

TESTCASE A: A CIVIL WAR Possible roles of multinational business Possible roles of local business Possible roles for terrorists Possible roles for various kinds of criminals Possible roles for non-state armed groups Possible roles for NGOs, external+national Possible roles for civil society groups Possible roles for families+individuals

TESTCASE B: A BIG NATURAL DISASTER Roles for multinationals? Roles for other business? Roles for terrorists? Roles for criminals? Roles for NGOs? Roles for civil society groups? Roles for individuals?