“…While state policing formations and notions of police science were well entrenched in continental Europe, these public forms were eventually met with competition from private policing agencies (Button, 2007; Johnston, 1992; Rigakos, 2000; Shearing and Stenning, 1983). Today, it is a well understood empirical reality that the private sector outnumbers the public police sector in almost all capitalist economies (de Waard, 1999; Jones and Newburn, 1995; Rigakos and Ergul, 2013; van Steden and Sarre, 2007). It is thus no surprise that the size of the private security sector has typically vacillated alongside developments in securing wage labour, extracting surplus value and enforcing class relations as evidenced through the strong correlation between economic inequality and total policing, both public and private, per population (Rigakos and Ergul, 2017).…”