Private security companies and political order in Congo: a history of extraversion
Abstract
This PhD dissertation explores how private security companies co-constitute political order in the Democratic Republic of Congo, as a case through which broader questions regarding the relationship between security governance and political order can be investigated. The thesis explores the spatial distribution of private security companies in Congo, and investigates their predominant entanglement with internationalized governance processes. Furthermore, it explores how this contemporary instance of the relationship between security governance and political order resonates with and reproduces longer-standing patterns of internationalized political ordering in Congo.
This thesis raises questions around how it may be possible to theorize the relationship between security governance and political order to capture the historical ways in which that relationship has been articulated in Congolese history. Specifically, it asks whether broadening our conception of political order to encompass both security governance and the infrastructural arrangements underpinning modern political order might bring into view durable patterns of political ordering that otherwise remain hidden—patterns of extraversion, where key domestic ordering processes in Congo are reproduced as the properties of international power-relations.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
School of Global Studies, Peace and Development Research ; Institutionen för globala studier, freds- och utvecklingsforskning
Disputation
Torsdag den 5 Juni, kl. 13:00, Annedalseminariet 420, Campus Linné,. Seminariegatan 1A
Date of defence
2014-06-05
View/ Open
Date
2014-05-12Author
Schouten, Peer
Keywords
International Relations
Peace & Development Research
private security companies
Congo (Democratic Republic of)
political order
infrastructure development
Belgian colonialism
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-9093-1
Language
eng