2020
DOI: 10.1177/0095327x20927471
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Contractors in Iraq: Exploited Class or Exclusive Club?

Abstract: Corporate privatization of security has generated a neoliberal iteration of an old profession: the private military contractor. This development has revolutionized security policies across the globe while reviving old patterns of inequality. Following neoliberal logic, outsourcing fosters two types of employment: the exploitative and the exclusive. The first refers to low-status individuals hired en masse to perform menial labor; the second refers to experts who perform functions central to the employer’s miss… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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References 70 publications
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“…That odd hybrid status of between military and civilian and between private and public actors invited complicated legal questions, stressing issues of jurisdiction, accountability, and oversight (Leander, 2010; Swed & Crosbie, 2017; Terry, 2010). Finally, the extensive outsourcing in the global south also invited a debate on racism and exploitation associated with this industry (Chisholm, 2014; Chisholm & Stachowitsch, 2016; Eichler, 2014; Moore, 2017; Swed & Burland, 2022).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That odd hybrid status of between military and civilian and between private and public actors invited complicated legal questions, stressing issues of jurisdiction, accountability, and oversight (Leander, 2010; Swed & Crosbie, 2017; Terry, 2010). Finally, the extensive outsourcing in the global south also invited a debate on racism and exploitation associated with this industry (Chisholm, 2014; Chisholm & Stachowitsch, 2016; Eichler, 2014; Moore, 2017; Swed & Burland, 2022).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%