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Private Policing and Human Rights


David Alan Sklansky


University of California, Berkeley - School of Law


Law & Ethics of Human Rights, Vol. 5, Issue 1, Article 3, 2011
UC Berkeley Public Law Research Paper No. 1792651

Abstract:     
Very little of the expanding debate over private policing has employed the language of human rights. This is notable not just because private policing is a distinctly global phenomenon, and human rights have become, as Michael Ignatieff puts it, "the lingua franca of global moral thought." It is notable as well because a parallel development that seems in many ways related to the spread of private policing - the escalating importance of private military companies - has been debated as a matter of human rights.

This short paper, written for a conference on private power and human rights at the Academic Center of Law & Business in Ramat Gan, Israel, asks whether discussions of private policing have been impoverished by their failure to employ the language of human rights. It begins by discussing the dramatic rise, over the past several decades, in the size and significance of private policing. It then summarizes the academic and public policy debates about that development and considers what, if anything, the language of human rights could add to those debates, and whether the addition would be welcome. One strand of the paper compares the debate over private policing with the debate over private military companies. Another strand compares private policing with private prisons, in light of the recent ruling by the Supreme Court of Israel declaring private prisons unconstitutional. The paper concludes that the benefits of introducing the language of human rights into debates about private policing are far from clear - with one exception. Human rights, particularly as codified in international treaties, do seem a promising way to get traction on a particular aspect of police privatization that has received less attention than it deserves: the way in which widespread reliance on private security firms may weaken public commitment to providing everyone with a minimally acceptable degree of protection against private violence.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 26

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Date posted: March 26, 2011 ; Last revised: June 16, 2011

Suggested Citation

Sklansky, David Alan, Private Policing and Human Rights. Law & Ethics of Human Rights, Vol. 5, Issue 1, Article 3, 2011; UC Berkeley Public Law Research Paper No. 1792651. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1792651

Contact Information

David Alan Sklansky (Contact Author)
University of California, Berkeley - School of Law ( email )
Boalt Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720-7200
United States
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