ID | 084309 |
Title Proper | Distinctions, distinctions |
Other Title Information | 'public' and 'private' force? |
Language | ENG |
Author | Owens, Patricia |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article evaluates recent literatures within International Relations on so-called 'private force'. It suggests that the conceptual weaknesses of much of this literature can be accounted for, in part, by a misunderstanding of the historical and sociological importance of the way power is organized and legitimated through shifts in the public-private distinction. This distinction is one of the primary mechanisms, if not the primary mechanism, for organizing political, economic and, therefore, military power. For the sake of historical accuracy and conceptual integrity scholars should abandon the terminology of 'public' and 'private' force. Tracing how public-private distinctions shift and change as an effect of political power is a joint task for historical sociology and international political theory |
`In' analytical Note | International Affairs Vol. 84, No. 5; Sep 2008: p977-990 |
Journal Source | International Affairs Vol. 84, No. 5; Sep 2008: p977-990 |
Key Words | Public Force ; Private Force ; Private Force - International Relation ; Public Force - Distinctions - Private Force |