2 research outputs found
Private Financing of the Military: A Local Political Economy Approach
The article of record as published may be located at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12116-012-9119-2In developing countries that are democratizing after military rule, and
undergoing liberalizing economic reforms that encourage a shrinking of the state,
what missions are the armed forces performing, who funds those missions, who
benefits from military services, and why? This article analyzes security provision
by the armed forces for paying clients鈥攅specially private companies in extractive
industries鈥攊n accordance with negotiations between clients and commanders of the
local military units that directly provide the security. The analysis identifies two paths
toward local military鈥揷lient relations. First, weak state capacity may mean that
government control of military finances brought by democratization and economic
reform remains limited to the national level, promoting local military鈥揷lient
exchanges. Second, amid minimal government control of military finances, even in
the capital city, demand from companies in the powerful extractive industries and
from recently endowed subnational governments can encourage local military鈥揷lient
contracting