Ítem
Acceso Abierto

Mercenarios y compañías militares y de seguridad privadas : estructuración de sus redes normativas

dc.contributor.advisorOlasolo Alonso, Héctor
dc.creatorUrueña Sánchez, Mario Iván
dc.creator.degreeDoctor en Derechospa
dc.creator.degreetypeFull timespa
dc.date.accessioned2019-04-09T16:35:39Z
dc.date.available2019-04-09T16:35:39Z
dc.date.created2019-04-05
dc.date.issued2019
dc.descriptionEl objetivo de esta investigación es el de entender la construcción del derecho internacional como un proceso de estructuración a través del estudio de la redefinición de las redes normativas relativas al comportamiento de las formas privadas de violencia. Para dar alcance a este objetivo, se ha escogido al constructivismo como marco teórico. Esta elección se sustenta en contar con una teoría que facilite un análisis multinivel de regímenes jurídicos y cuya ontología sea fuertemente ideacionalista para ofrecer una lectura alternativa del proceso histórico en el que las normas y el comportamiento de los agentes se coconstituyen (estructuran). Como unidades de análisis preponderantes se han escogido a los actores legitimadores, individuos cuyos actos de lenguaje preforman el comportamiento de unidades jurídico/políticas e interactúan con las normas para reafirmarlas, redefinirlas o contravenirlas. El proceso de estructuración que de allí resulta da origen a la conformación de redes normativas interdependientes. En el caso concreto, se estudiarán las redes normativas de dos formas de violencia cuyo proceso de legitimación ha sido intensamente reivindicado como resistido: los mercenarios y las Compañías Militares de Seguridad Privada. Al reconstruir las redes normativas de cada una de ambas formas y contrastarlas, se busca aportar al debate sobre el papel del Estado y la violencia en la sociedad. La metodología por utilizar para este cometido parte de un análisis cualitativo-interpretativo que combina la genealogía y el análisis de contenido como técnicas.spa
dc.description.abstractThe objective of this research is to understand the construction of international law as a structuring process through the study of the redefinition of web of norms related to the behavior of private forms of violence. To achieve this goal, constructivism has been chosen as a theoretical framework. This choice is based on having a theory that facilitates a multilevel analysis of legal regimes and whose ontology is strongly ideational to offer an alternative reading of the historical process in which the rules and behavior of the agents are co-constituted (structured). As preponderant units of analysis, legitimacy actors have been chosen, individuals whose acts of language preform the behavior of legal / political units and interact with the norms to reaffirm, redefine or contravene them. The structuring process that results there gives rise to the formation of interdependent regulatory networks. In the specific case, the normative networks of two forms of violence whose legitimization process has been intensely claimed as resisted will be studied: the mercenaries and the Private Security Military Companies. By reconstructing the normative networks of each of these two forms and contrasting them, we seek to contribute to the debate on the role of the State and violence in society. The methodology to be used for this purpose is based on a qualitative-interpretative analysis that combines genealogy and content analysis as techniques.spa
dc.description.embargo2021-04-09 01:01:01: Script de automatizacion de embargos. info:eu-repo/date/embargoEnd/2021-04-09
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.48713/10336_19386
dc.identifier.urihttp://repository.urosario.edu.co/handle/10336/19386
dc.language.isospa
dc.publisherUniversidad del Rosariospa
dc.publisher.departmentFacultad de Jurisprudenciaspa
dc.publisher.programDoctorado en Derechospa
dc.rightsAtribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 2.5 Colombiaspa
dc.rights.accesRightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.rights.accesoAbierto (Texto Completo)spa
dc.rights.licenciaEL AUTOR, manifiesta que la obra objeto de la presente autorización es original y la realizó sin violar o usurpar derechos de autor de terceros, por lo tanto la obra es de exclusiva autoría y tiene la titularidad sobre la misma. PARGRAFO: En caso de presentarse cualquier reclamación o acción por parte de un tercero en cuanto a los derechos de autor sobre la obra en cuestión, EL AUTOR, asumirá toda la responsabilidad, y saldrá en defensa de los derechos aquí autorizados; para todos los efectos la universidad actúa como un tercero de buena fe. EL AUTOR, autoriza a LA UNIVERSIDAD DEL ROSARIO, para que en los términos establecidos en la Ley 23 de 1982, Ley 44 de 1993, Decisión andina 351 de 1993, Decreto 460 de 1995 y demás normas generales sobre la materia, utilice y use la obra objeto de la presente autorización. -------------------------------------- POLITICA DE TRATAMIENTO DE DATOS PERSONALES. Declaro que autorizo previa y de forma informada el tratamiento de mis datos personales por parte de LA UNIVERSIDAD DEL ROSARIO para fines académicos y en aplicación de convenios con terceros o servicios conexos con actividades propias de la academia, con estricto cumplimiento de los principios de ley. Para el correcto ejercicio de mi derecho de habeas data cuento con la cuenta de correo habeasdata@urosario.edu.co, donde previa identificación podré solicitar la consulta, corrección y supresión de mis datos.spa
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/co/
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAbrahamsen, R., & Williams, M. C. (2007). Securing the City: Private Security Companies and Non-State Authority in Global Governance. International Relations, 21 (2), 237-253.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAbrahamsen, R., & Williams, M. C. (2007). Selling Security: Assessing the impact of military privatization. Review of International Political Economy, 15 (1), 131-146spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAdams, T. K. (2002). Private Military Companies: Mercenaries of the 21st Century. Small Wars and Insurgencies, 13:2, 54-67.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAffi, L., Elmi, A. A., Knight, A. W., & Mohamed, S. (2016). Countering piracy through private security in the Horn of Africa: prospects and pitfalls. Third World Quaterly, 37 (5), 934-950.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAhmedou, N., & Gumedze, S. (2008). Seminar Report on the Prohibition of Mercenary Activities and Regulation of Certain Activities in Country of Armed Conflictspa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAkcinaroglu, S., & Radziszewski. (2012). Private Military Companies, Opportunities, and Termination of Civil Wars in Africa. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 57 (5), 795-821.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAlexandra, A. (2012). Private Military and Security Companies and the Liberal Conception of Violence. Criminal Justice Ethics, 31 (3), 158-174.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAlimahomed, S. (2014). Homeland Security Inc.: public order, private profit. Race & Class, 55 (4), 82-99.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAllen, M. A., Flynn, M. E., & VanDusky-Allen, J. (2016). Regions of Hierarchy and Security: US Troop Deployments, Spatial Relations, and Defense Burdens. International Interactions, 188 (4), 1-27.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationÁlvarez Cobelas, J. (2001). Los mercernarios, o cómo África sobrepasa la modernidad. Nova Africa, No. 9, 33-54.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAmbos, K. (2013). ¿Castigo sin soberano? La cuestión del ius puniendi en derecho penal internacional: Una primera contribución para una teoría del derecho penal internacional consistente. Persona y Derecho, 68, 5-38.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAnders, B. (2013). Tree-huggers and baby-killers: The relationship between NGOs and PMSCs and its impact on coordinating actors in complex operations. Small Wars & Insurgencies, 24 (2), 278-294.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAndreopoulos, G., & Brandle, S. (2012). Revisiting the Role of Private Military and Security Companies. Criminal justice Ethics, 33:3, 138-157spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAning, E. K. (2001). Whither Africa's Security in the New Millennium: State or Mercenary-induced Stability? Global Society, 15 (2), 149-171.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAning, K., Jaye, T., & Atoubi, S. (2008). The Role of Private Military Companies in US-Africa Policy. Review of African Political Economy, 35 (118), 613-628spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationArtelli, M. J., & Deckro, R. F. (2008). Fourth generation operations: principles for the 'Long War'. Small Wars & Insurgencies, 19 (2), 221-237.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAuer, C. (2004). In it for the money. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 60 (2), 42-43.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAvant, D. (2004). Mercenaries. Foreign Policy, 143, 20-28.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAvant, D. (2004). The Privatization of Security and Change in the Control of Force. International Studies Perspectives, 5, 153-157.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAvant, D. (2005). Private security companies. New Political Economy, 10 (1), 121-131spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAvant, D. (2005). The market of force. Nueva York: Cambridge University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAvant, D. (2006). The implications of Marketized Security for IR Theory: The Democratic Peace, Late State Building and the Nature and Frecuency of Conflict. Perspectives on Politics, 4 (3), 507-528.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAvant, D. D. (2007). Contracting for Services in U.S. Military Operations. Political Science and Politics, 40 (3), 457-460.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAvant, D., & Sigelman, L. (2010). Private Security and Democracy: Lessons from the US in Iraq. Security Studies, 19 (2), 230-265.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBailes, A. J. (2006). Les affaires et la sécurité: quel role pour le secteur privé? Politique étragére, 119-130.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBaker, D.-P., & Gumedze, S. (2007). Private military/security companies and human security in Africa. African Security Review, 16 (4), 1-5.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBanerjee, Kiran. (2012). Genealogy, History, and Human Rights. Journal of International Law and International Relations, 8, 70-72.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBarley, S. R. (2007). Corporations, Democracy, and the Public Good. Journal of Management Inquiry, 16 (3), 201-215.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBarnes, D. M. (2013). Should Private Security Companies be Employed for Counterinsurgency Operations? Journal of Military Ethics, 12 (3), 201-224.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBenbow, T. (2008). Talking 'Bout Our Generation? Assessing the Concept of "Four-Generation Warfare". Comparative Strategy, 27 (2), 148-163.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBerger, P. L., & Luckmann, T. (1991). The Social Construction of Reality. Londres: Penguin Books.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBerndtsson, J. (2012). Security Professionals for Hire: Exploring the Many Faces of Private Security Expertise. Millenium: Journal of International Studies, 40 (2), 303-320.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBjork, K., & Jones, R. (2005). Overcoming Dilemmas Created by the 21st Century Mercenaries: Conceptualising the Use of Private Security Companies in Iraq. Third World Quaterly, 26 (4/5), 777-796.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBliss, G. L. (2002). Revolution in Business Affairs: Strategic Business Alliances in Army Transformation. Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania: U.S Army War College.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBosch, S. (2007). Private security contractors and internartional humanitarian law -a skirmish for recognition in international armed conflicts-. African Security, 16:4, 34-52.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBoterbloem, K. (2014). Dutch Mercenaries in the Tsar's Service: The Van Bockhoven Clan. War & Society, 33 (2), 59-79.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBranovic, Z., & Chojnacki, S. (2011). The logic of security markets: Security governance in failed states. Security Dialogue, 42 (6), 553-569.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBriody, D. (2004). The Halliburton Agenda. New Jersey: Wiley.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBrodeur, J. P. (2005). Trotsky in Blue: Permanent Policing Reform. The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology, 38 (2), 254-267.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBrooks, D. (2000). Messiahs or mercenaries? The future of international private military services. International Peacekeeping, 7 (4), 129-144.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBrown, K. (2010). From the Balkans to Baghdad (via Baltimore): Labor Migration and the Routes of Empire. Slavic Review, 69 (4), 816-834.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBruce, T. (2010). Piracy as Statecraft: The Mediterranean Policies o fthe Fifth/Eleventh- Century Taifa of Denia. Al-Masaq, 22 (3), 235-248.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBruneau, T. (2015). Impediments to Fighting the Islamic State: Private Contractors amnd US Strategy . Journal of Strategic Studies, 1-24spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBruneau, T. C. (2013). Contracting Out Security . Journal of Strategic Studies, 36 (5), 638-665.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBurbano Hinojosa, C. P. (2014). La privatización de la seguridad en la región andina: desde el epicentro colombiano, alertas para la región. URVIO, Revista Latinoamericana de Estudios de Seguridad, No. 14, 121-133.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBures, O. (2005). Private military companies: A second best peacekeeping option? International Peacekeeping, 12 (4), 533-546.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCabañas, M. A. (2014). Narcoculture and the Politics of Representation. Latin American Perspectives, 41 (2), 3-17.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCallaway, R. L., & Matthews, E. G. (2008). Strategic US Foreign Assistance: The Battle between Human Rights and National Security. Abingdon: Ashgate Publishing Groupspa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCameron, J. (2007). Privates on Parade. The World Today, 63 (5), 12-13.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCameron, L., & Chetail, V. (2013). Privatizing War: Private Military and Security Companies under Public International Law. Nueva York: Cambidge University Pressspa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCampderrich Bravo, R. (2009). ¿Derecho internacional o guerra imperial? Hans Kelsen y Carl Schmitt ante la pacificación de las relaciones interestatales por medio del derecho. Anales de la Cátedra Francisco Suárez, No. 43, 19-38.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCano Linares, M. Á. (2008). El derecho internacional humanitario frente al uso de la fuerza como actividad empresarial ¿El fin de un monopolio? Anuario Derecho, vol. XXIV, 47-77.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCarmola, K. (2010). Private Security Contractors and New Wars: Risk, law, and ethics. Londres y Nueva York: Routledge.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCarr, M. (2010). Slouching towards dystopia: the new military futurism. Race & Class, 51 (3), 13-32.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCarty, A. (1991). Critical International Law: Recent Trends in the Theory of International Law. EJIL, No. 1, 1-27.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCastro, W. R. (2005). Regulating the new privateers of the twenty-first century . Rutgers Law Journal, 37, 671-702.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationChase-Dunn, C., & Grimes, P. (1995). World-Systems Analysis. Annual Review of Sociology, 21, 387-417.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationChapleau, P., & Misser, F. (2001). Le Retour des Mercenaires. Politique Internationale, La Revue, 210-228.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationChatterjee, P. (2009). Halliburton's Army: How a Well-connected Texas Oil Company Revolutionized the Way America Makes War. New York: Nation Books.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCicchini, J., & Herrera, R. (2008). Sociétés militaires priveés: la guerre par procuration? Le cas de la guerre d'Irak. Recherches Internationales, 8, 9-26.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCilliers, J. (2002). A role for private military companies in peacekeeping? Conflict, Security & Development, 145-151.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationClausewitz, K. v. (2002). De la guerra. s.l.: librodot.com.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCohn, L. P. (2011). It Wasn't in My Contract: Security Privatization and Civilian Control. Armed Forces & Society, 37 (3), 381-398.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCollins, S. D. (2004). War without end: the domestic economic fallout of empire. New Political Science, 26 (3), 347-369.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationConesa, P. (2003). Groupes Armés non étatiques: violences privées, sécurités privées. Revue internationale et stratégique, No. 49, 157-164.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCorn, G. S. (2012). Contracrors and the Law. En C. Kinsey, & M. (. Patterson, Contractors and War: The Transformation of United States' Expeditionary Operations (págs. 157-183). Palo Alto: Stanford University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCotton, S. K., Petersohn, U., & Dunigan, M. (2010). Hired Guns: Views about Armed Contractors in Operation Iraqi Freedom. Santa Monica: RAND Corporationspa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCox, R. (2012). Asymmetric warfare and military conduct in the Middle Ages. Journal of Medieval History, 38 (1), 100-125.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCraze, S. (2016). Prosecuting privateers for piracy: How Piracy law transitioned from treason to a crime against property. Maritime History, 28 (4), 654-670.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCroxton, D. (1999). The Peace of Westphalia of 1648 and the Origins of Sovereignty. The International History Review, 21 (3), 569-591.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCusumano, E. (2015). The scope of military privatisation: Military role conceptions and contractor support in the United States and the United Kingdom. International Relations, 29 (2), 219-241.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCusumano, E., & Kinsey, C. (2014). Bureaucratic Interests and teh Outsourcing of Security: The Privatization of Diplomatic Protection in the United States and the United Kingdom. Armed Forces & Society, 41 (4), 591-615.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDanet, D. (2009). Guerre d'Irak et paternariats public-privé: des paternariats public-privé controversés . Revue francaise d'administration publique, 130, 249-262.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDaniels, P. R. (2015). Just War and Administrative Personnel in the Private Military Industry. Journal of Military Ethics, 14 (2), 146-161.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDarity Jr., W. (2009). Guns and Butter Once Again. Review of Radical Political Economics, 41 (3), 285-290.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDavid, C. P. (2013). La Guerre et la Paix: Approches et enjeux de la sécurité et de la stratégie. Paris: SciencesPo: Les Presses.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDempsey Jr., G. C. (2002). Napoleon’s Mercenaries: Foreign Units in the French Army under the Consulate and Empire, 1799-1814. Londres: Grenhill Books.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDe Nevers, R. (2006). The Geneva Conventions and New Wars. Political Science Quaterly, 121 (3), 369-395.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDe Nevers, R. (2009). (Self) Regulating War?: Voluntary Regulation and the Private Security Industry . Security Studies, 18 (3), 479-516.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDe Nevers, R. (2009). Private Security Companies and the Laws of War. Security Dialogue, 40:2, 169-190.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDeclaration of Jury of Conscience World Tribunal on Iraq: Istanbul 23-27 June 2005. (2005). Feminist Review, No. 81, 95-102.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDelgado Ramos, G. C., & Romano, S. M. (2011). Plan Colombia e Iniciativa Mérida: negocio y seguridad interna. El Cotidiano, No. 170, 89-100.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDeWinter-Schmitt, R. (2013). Montreux Five Years On: An Analysis of State efforts to implement Montreux Document legal obligations and good practices, s.n.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDickinson, L. A. (2011). Outsourcing War and Peace: How Privatizing Foreign Affairs Threatens Core Public Values and What We Can Do about it. New Haven: Yale University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDionisi, D. J. (2005). American Hiroshima: The Reasons Why And A Call To Strengthen America's Democracy. Victoria: Trafford Publishing.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDokubo, C. (2000). 'An Army for rent', private military corporations and civil conflicts in Africa: The case of Sierra Leone. Civil Wars, 3 (2), 51-64.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDombrowski, P., & Ghotz, E. (2006). Buying Military Transformation: Technological Innovation and the Defense Industry. New York: Columbia University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDonohue, L. K. (2010). The Shadow of State Secrets. University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 159 (1), 77-216.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDorn, N., & Levi, M. (2007). European Private Security, Corporate Investigation and Military Services: Collective Security, Market Regulation and Structuring the Public Sphere. Policing and Society, 17 (3), 213-238.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDownes, C. (2010). Unintentional Militarism: Over-reliance on Military Methods and Mindsets in US National Security and its Consequences. Defense & Security Analysis, 26 (4), 371-385.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDuncan, G. (2006). Los señores de la guerra: de paramilitares, mafiosos y autodefensas en Colombia. Bogotá D.C.: Planeta.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDunigan, M. (2014). The future of US military contracting: Current trends and future implications. International Journal, 69 (4), 510-524.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEchevarria II, A. J. (2005). Deconstructing the theory of fourth-generation war. Contemporary Security Policy, 26 (2), 233-241.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEdwards, J. (2010). Introduction: From the East India Company to the West Indies andBeyon: TheWorld of British Sculpture, c. 1757-1947. Visual Culture in Britain, 11 (2), 147-172.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEl Centro para el Control Democrático de las Fuerzas Armadas de Ginebra. (2011). El Documento de Montreux sobre las empresas militares y de seguridad privadas: Actas del Seminario Regional para Amperica Latina. (pág. 30). Santiago de Chile: El Centro para el Control Democrático de las Fuerzas Armadas de Ginebra.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEllington, S. (2011). The Rise of Battlefield Private Contractors. Public Imtegrity, 13 (2), 131-148.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationElman, C., & Elman, M. F. (2003). Lessons from Lakatos. En C. Elman, & M. F. Elman, Progress in international Relations Theory (págs. 21-70). Cambridge y Londres: MIT Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationElsea, J. K. (2011). Private Security Contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan: Legal Issues. Russia, China and Eurasia-Social, Historical, 27 (1), 45-93.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEncyclopedia of World Terrorism. (2002). Nueva York: Sharpe reference. Engelhardt, T. (2010). American Way of War: How Bush's Wars Became Obama's. Chicago: Haymarket Books.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEnloe, C. (2004). Crucial Reporting: Human Rights Reports and Why We Should All Be Reading Them. The Women's Review of Books, 21 (5), 21-23.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationErwin, S. (2010). A War of One's Own: Mercenaries and the Theme of Arma Aliena in Machiavelli's Il Principe. British Journal for the History of Philosophy, 18 (4), 541-574spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEttinger, A. (2011). k and the rise of the private military industry. International Journal, 743-764.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEttinger, A. (2013). Neoliberalism, the State and War. Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 379-393.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEttinger, A. (2014). After the gold rush: Corporate Warriors and The Market of Force Revisited. International Journal, 69 (4), 559-569.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEttinger, A. (2014). The mercenary moniker: Condemnations, contradictions and the politics of definition. Security Dialogue, 45 (2) , 174-191.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEvans, M. (2005). Elegant irrelevance revisited: A critique of fourth-generation warfare. Contemporary Security Policy, 26 (2), 242-249.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFabre, C. (2010). In Defence of Mercenarism. Brown Journal of Political Science, 40, 539-559.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFaite, A. (2004). Involvement of private contractors in armed conflict: implications under international humanitarian law. Defence Studies, 4:2, 166-183.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFearon, J. D., & Laitin, D. D. (2004). Neotrusteeship and the Problem of Weak States. International Security, 28 (4), 5-43.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFelbab-Brown, V. (2010). Shooting-Up: Counterinsurgency and the War on Drugs. Washington: Brookings Institution Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFierke, K.M. (2002). Links across the Abyss: Language and Logic in International Relations. International Studies Quaterly, 46 (3), 331-354.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFiliz, Z. (2007). Private military companies: 'Shadow soldiers' of neo-colonialism. Capital & Class, 92, 1-11.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFinnemore, M. (1996). National interest in International society. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFitzsimmons, S. (2013). Wheeled Warriors: Explaining Variations in the Use of Violence by Private Security Companies in Iraq. Security Studies, 22 (4), 707-739.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFlynn, M. (2005). What's the deal at Manta? Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 61 (1), 23-29.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFordham, B. O. (2003). The Political and Economic Sources of Inflation in the American Military Budget. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 47 (5), 574-593.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFrance, J. (2008). Mercenaries and Paid Men: The Mercenary Identity in the Middle Ages. Leiden y Boston: Brill.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFrancis, D. J. (1999). Mercenary intervention in Sierra Leone: Providing national security or international exploitation? Third World Quaterly, 20 (2), 319-338.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFraser, B. (2013). The Reluctant Mercenary: Vulnerabilty and the 'Whores of War' . Journal of Military Ethics, 12 (3), 235-251.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFredland, E., & Kendry, A. (1999). The privatisation of military force: Economic virtues, vices and government responsibility . Cambrigde Review of International Affairs, 13 (1), 147-164.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFredland, J. E. (2004). Outsourcing Military Force: A Transactions Cost Perspective on the Role of Military Companies. Defence and Peace Economics, 15 (3), 205-219.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFrye, E. L. (2004). Private Military Firms in the new World Order: How Redefining "mercenary" can tame the "dogs of war". Fordham Law Review, 73, 2607-2664.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFukumi, S. (2008). Cocaine Trafficking in Latin America: EU and US Policy Responses. Abingdon: Ashgate Publishing Group.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFulloon, M. (2013). Private Military Companies: The New Condottieri. Social Alternatives, 32:1, 49-53.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGalula, D. (2006). Counterinsurgency Warfare. Westport-Londres: Praeger Security International.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGambone, M. D. (2013). Legacies of War: Small Wars: Low Intensity Threats and the American Response since Vietnam. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGarcía, T. (2005). Privatisation du mercenariat et droit international. Cité, 24, 119-131.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGhazi Janaby, M. (2015). The Legal Status of Employees of Private Military/Security Companies Participating in U.N. Peacekeeping Operations. Northwestern Journal of International Human Rights, 13:1, 82-102.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGilbert, E. (2015). The gift of war: Cash, counterinsurgency, and 'collateral daamge'. Security Dialogue, 46 (5), 403-421.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGodfrey, R., Brewis, J., Grady, J., & Grocott, C. (2014). The private military industry and neoliberal imperialism: Mapping the terrain. Organization, 21 (1), 106-125.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGómez del Prado, J. L. (2009). Private Military and Security Companies and the UN Working Group on the Use of Mercenaries. Journal of Concflict & Security Law, 13:3, 429-450.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGómez del Prado, J. L. (2011). Impact on Human Rights of a New Non-State Actor: Private Military and Security Companies. Brown Journal of World Affairs, 18:1, 151-168.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGómez del Prado, J. L. (s.f.). Las empresas militares y de seguridad privadas en los conflcitos armados, sesgo procupante para los Derechos Humanos. Zaragoza: Fundación semnario de investigación para la paz.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGonzález Alcantud, J.A. (2003). Marroquíes en la guerra civil española: campos equívocos. Barcelona: Anthropos.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGrandin, G. (2010). Empire's Senescence: U.S. Policy in Latin America. New Labor Forum, 19 (1), 15-23.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGregg, H. S. (2010). Crafting a Better US Grand Strategy in the Post-September 11 World: Lessons from the Early Years of the Cold War. Foreign Policy Analysis, 6, 237-255.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGuevara, E. (1972). Escritos y discursos. Tomo 1. La Habana: Editorial de ciencias sociales.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGutman, H. (2004). Soldiers for Hire. Monthly Review, 56 (2), 11-18.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHagengruber, D. (2006). Striking a Balance: The Evolution of Today's Private Military and Security Industry in the United States. Washington: The Elliott School of International Affairs of The George Washington University.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHalpern, B. H., & Snider, K. F. (2012). Products That Kill and Corporate Social Responsibility: The Case of U.S. Defense Firms. Armed Forces & Society, 38 (4), 604-624spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHammes, T. X. (2005). War evolves into the fourth generation. Contemporary Security Policy 26 (2), 189-221.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHanks, T. J. (2014). Security Outsourcing -Adjunting The New Rules For the Federal Gobvernment Overseas Private Security Contractor Procurement System. Washington: The George Washington University Law School.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHansen, J. C. (2012). Rethinking the regulation of Private Military and Security Companies under International Humanitarian Law. Fordham International Law Journal, 35, 698-736.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHasham, M. (2004). Public Wars, Private Profit. The World Today, 60, 7-9.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHedahl, M. (2009). Blood and Blackwaters: A Call to Arms for the Profession of Arms . Journal of Military Ethics, 8 (1), 19-33.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHedahl, M. (2012). Unaccountable: The Current State of Private Military and Security Companies. Criminal Justice Ethics, 31 (3), 175-192.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHeinecken, L. (2014). Outsourcing Public Security: The Unforeseen Cosequences for the Military Profession. Armed Forces & Society, 40 (4), 625-646.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHerdegen, M. (2005). Derecho Internacional Público. México D.F.: Konrad Adenauer Stiftung.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHigate, P. (2012). The Private Militarized and Security Contractor as Geocorporeal Actor. International Political Sociology, 6, 355-372.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHin Yan, L. (2011). War by Contract: Human Rights, Humanitarian Law and Private Contractors. King's Law Journal, 22 (3), 431-435.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHing Wen, A. (2003). Suing the Sovereign's Servant: The Implications of Privatization for the Scope of Sovereign Immunities. Columbia Law Review, 103 (6), 1538-1587.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHobbes, T. (1994). Leviatán. Barcelona: Atalaya.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHough, L. (2007). A study of peacekeeping, peace-enforcement and private military companies in Sierra Leone. Africa Security Review, 16 (4), 7-21.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHugh, T. (1997). La Trata de Esclavos: Historia del tráfico de seres humanos de 1440 a 1870 . Barcelona: Planeta.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHuman Rights First. (2008). Private Security Conractors at War: Ending the Culture of Impunity. Nueva York: Human Rights First.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHurst, S. M. (2010). "Trade in Force": the need for effective regulation of private military and security companies. California Law Review, 84:8, 448-490.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHuskey, K. A. (2012). Accountability for Private Military and Security Contractors in the International Legal Regime. Criminal Justice Ethics, 31 (3), 193-212.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHylton, F. (2010). Plan Colombia: The Mesure of Succes. Brown Journal of World Affairs.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationIISS. (2005). Private security companies. Strategic Comments, 11 (10), 1-2.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationIISS. (2007). Contractors in war: Blackwater case will test regulation. Strategic comments, 13 (9), 1-2spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationInternational Encyclopedia of World Terrorism. (1997). Ann Arbor: Fitzroy Dearborn publishers.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationIsenberg, D. (2009). Shadow force: private security contractors in Iraq. Westport: Praeger Security International .spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJackson, P. (2002). 'War is much too serious a thing to be left to military men': Private military companies, combat and regulation. Civil Wars, 5:4, 30-55.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJackson, P. (2002). 'War is much too serious a thing to be left to military men': Private military companies, combat and regulation. Civil Wars, 5:4, 30-55.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJaskoski, M. (2012). Public Security Forces with Private Funding: Local Army Entrepreneurship in Peru and Ecuador. Latin American Research Review, 47 (2), 79-99.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJoachim, J., & Schneiker, A. (2012). New Humanitarians? Frame Appropriation through Private Military and Security Companies. Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 40 (2), 365-388.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJoachim, J., & Schneiker, A. (2012). Of 'true professionals' and 'ethical hero warriors': A gender-discourse analysis of private military and security companies. Security Dialogue, 43 (6), 495-512.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJoachim, J., & Schneiker, A. (2014). All for one and one in all: private military security companies as soldiers, business managers and humanitarians. Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 246-267.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJoachim, J., & Schneiker, A. (2015). NGOs and the price of governance: the trade-offs between regulating and criticizing private military and security companies. Critical Military Studies,1 (3), 185-201.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJones, C. (2006). Private Military Companies as 'Epistemic Communities'. Civil Wars, 8 (3/4), 355-372.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJones, S. G. (2008). Counterinsurgency in Afghanistan. Santa Monica: Rand Corporation.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJones, S. G. (2008). The Rise of Afghanistan's Insurgency: State Failure and Jihad . International Security, 32 (4), 7-40.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJunio, T. J. (2009). Military History and Fourth Generation Warfare. Journal of Strategic Studies, 32 (2), 243-269.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKaldor, M. (2001). Las nuevas guerras: la violencia organizada en la era global. Barcelona: Tusquets Editores.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKálmán, J. (2013). Mercenaries Reloaded? Applicability of the Notion of 'Mercenaries' in Relation to Private Military Companies and their Employees. Acta Juridica Hungarica, 54 (4), 367-383.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKalyanaraman, S. (2003). Conceptualisations of Guerrilla Warfare. Strategic Analysis., 27 (2), 172-185.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKamola, I. (2018). Pirate Capitalism, or the Primitive Accumulation of Capital Itself? Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 0 (00), 1-22.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKeller, W. W., & Nolan, J. E. (2001). Mortgaging Security for Economic Gain: U.S. Arms Policy in an Insecure World . International Studies Perspectives, 2, 177-193.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKilcullen, D. (2010). Counterinsurgency. Oxford: Oxford University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKinsey, C. (2002). Private military companies: options for regulation. Security & Development, 2 (3), 127-137.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKinsey, C. (2003). Le droit international et le controle des mercenaires et des compagnies militaires privées. Culture & Conflits, 52, 91-116.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKinsey, C. (2005). Challenging international law: a dilemma of private security companies. Conflict, Security & Development, 5:3, 269-293.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKinsey, C. (2006). Coporate soldiers and International Security. Nueva York: Routledge.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKinsey, C. (2007). Problematising the Role of Private Security Companies in Small Wars . Small Wars & Insurgencies, 18 (4), 584-614.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKinsey, R. (2005). Regulations and Control of Private Military Companies: The Legislative Dimension. Contemporary Security Policy, 26:1, 84-100.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKipnis, A. (2007). Neoliberalism Reified: Suzhi Discourse and Tropes of Neoliberalism in the People´s Republic of China. The Journal of the Royal Anthropoligical Institute, 13 (2), 383-400spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKlen, M. (2004). La privatisation de la guerre. Études, 401, 181-191.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKlotz, A., & Lynch, C. (2007). Strategies for research in constructivist International Relations. Nueva York, Londres: M.E. Sharpe.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKonstantin, A. (2016). Threats to Leader's Political Survival and Pro-Government Militia Formation. International Interactions, 00 (00), 1-26.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKrahmann, E. (2005). American Hegemony or Global Governance? Competing Visions of International Security. International Studies Review, 7, 531-545.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKrahmann, E. (2005). Private Military Services in the UK and Germany: Between Partnership and Regulation. European Security, 14 (2), 277-295.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKrahmann, E. (2005). Regulating Private Military Companies: What Role for the EU? . Contemporary Security Policy, 26 (1), 103-125.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKrahmann, E. (2005). Security governance and the private military industry in Europe and North America. Conflict, Security and Development, 5 (2), 247-268.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKrahmann, E. (2008). Security: Collective Good or Commodity? European Journal of International Relations, 14 (3), 379-404.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKrahmann, E. (2010). Citizens and the Privatization of Security. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKrahmann, E. (2012). From 'Mercenaries' to 'Private Security Contractors': The (Re) Construction of Armed Security Providers in International Legal Discourses. Millenium: Journal of international Studies, 40:2, 343-363.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKrahmann, E. (2013). The United States, PMSCs and the state monopoly on violence: Leading the way towards norma change. Security Dialogue, 44 (1), 53-71.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKrishnan, A. (2008). War as Business: Technological Change and Military Service Contracting. Abingdon: Ashgate Publishing Group.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKundnani, A. (2004). Wired for war: military technology and the politics of fear. Race & Class, 46 (1), 116-125.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKurlantzick, J. (2003). Outsourcing the dirty work: the military and its reliance on hired guns. The American Prospect, 17-19.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLaboire Iglesias, M. (2012). La privatización de la seguridad: Las empresas militares y de seguridad privadas en el entorno estratégico actual. s.l.: Secretaría Técnica General, Ministerio de Defensa.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLam, J. S. (2009). Accountability for Private Military Contractors under the Alien Tort Statute. California Law Review, 97:5, 1459-1499.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLandau. (2006). The World Tribunal and Its Recommendations. Latin American Perspectives, 146 (33), 3-8.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLangholm, S. (1971). On the Concepts of Center and Periphery. Journal of Peace Research, 8(3/4), 273-278.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLangley, L.D., & Schoonover, T. (1995). The Banana Men: American Mercenaries & Entrepreneurs in Central America, 1880-1930. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLavalle, T. M. (2010). Civil-Military Integration: The Politics of Outsourcing National Security. Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 30 (3), 185-194.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLavallé, T. S. (1859). Historia de los Franceses, desde la época de los galos hasta nuestros días, tomo I. Barcelona: Ateneu Barcelonés.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLawyer, J. F. (2005). Military Effectiveness and Economic Efficiency in Peacekeeping: Public Versus Private . Oxford Development Studies, 33 (1), 99-106.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLeander, A. (2005). The Market for Force and Public Security: The Destabilizing Consequences of Private Military Companies . Journal of Peace Research, 42 (5), 605-622.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLeander, A. (2007). Private Security Contractors in the Debate about Darfur: Reflecting and Reinforcing Neo-Liberal Governmentality. International Relations, 21 (2), 201-216.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLeander, A. (2010). The paradoxical Impunity of Private Military Companies: Authority and Limits to legal accountability. Security Dialogue, vol. 41, No. 5, 467-490.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLee, E. (2009). Homeland Security and Private Sector Busines: Corporations' Role in Critical Infrastructure Protection. Boca Raton: CRC Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLendon, J. (2006). Soldados y Fantasmas: historia de las guerras en Grecia y Roma. Barcelona: Ariel.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLippert, R., & Daniel, O. (2006). Security Intelligence Networks and the Transformation of Contract Private Security. Policing and Society, 16 (1), 50-66.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLondon, P., & CACITeam. (2008). Our Good Name: A Company's Fight to Defend Its Honor and Get the Truth Told about Abu Ghraib. Nueva York: Regnery Publishing.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMabee, B. (2009). Pirates, privateers and the political economy of private violence. Global change, Peace & Security, 21 (2), 139-152.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMachairas, D. (2014). The Ethical Implications of the Use of Private Military Force: Regulatable or Irreconciliable? Journal of Military Ethics, 49-69.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMacías, A. (2012). The Impact of PMSC on the Role of Today's Military. Opera, 12, 221-238.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMakki. (2004). Privatisation de la sécurité et transformation de la guerre. Politique étrangére, 24, 849-861.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMakki, S. (2010). Les enjeux de l'intégration civilo-militaire aux États-Unis: Regards d'un sociologue embarqué dans les nouveaux réseaux hybrides. Politique américaine, No. 17, 27-48.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMalamud, M. (2014). Private Military and Security Companies in UN Missions. Peace Review, 26 (4), 571-577.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMaquiavelo, N. (1985). El príncipe. Madrid: Alba.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMaquiavelo, N. (2000). Del arte de la guerra. Madrid: Tecnos.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMarighella, C. (1972). Minimanual del guerrillero urbano. Madrid: CESEDEN.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMarsden, C. (2014). Hyper-power and Private Monopoly: The Unholy Marriage of (Neo)corporatism and the Imperial Surveillance State. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 31 (2), 100-108.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMarsh, D., & Stoker, G. (. (1995). Teoría y métodos de la Ciencia Política. Madrid: Alianza Editorial.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMathieu, F., & Dearden, N. (2007). Corporate Mercenaries: The Threat of Private Military & Security Companies. Review of African Political Economy, 34 (114), 744-755.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMayer, D. (2010). Peaceful Warriors: Private Military Security Companies and the Quest for Stable Societies. Journal of Business Ethics, 89, 387-401.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMcCallion, K. (2005). War for Sale! Battlefield Contractors in Latin America &the 'Corporatization' of America's War on Drugs. The University of Miami Inter-American Law Review, 36: 2/3, 317-353.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMcCarron, P. B. (2008). The Long Arm of the Law: The Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act. Corrections Today, 70 (6), 38-41.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMcCoy, K. E. (2010). Beyond Civil – Military Relations: Reflections on Civilian Control of a Private, Multinational Workforce. Armed Forces & Society, 36 (4), 671-694.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMcFate, S. (2008). Outsourcing the Making of Militaries: Dynccorp International as Sovereign Agent. Review of African Political Economy, 35 (118), 645-654.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMcIntyre, A. (2004). Private military firms in Africa. African Security Review, 13:3, 101-103.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMcLaren, P., & Martin, G. (2004). The Legend of the Bush Gang: Imperialism, War, and Propaganda. Cultural Studies-Critical Methodologies, 4 (3), 281-303.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMercenary or military company? (1998). The Adelphi Papers, 38 (316), 11-22.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMichaels, J. H. (2012). Managing Global Counterinsurgency: The Special Group (CI) 1962-1966. Journal of Strategic Studies, 35:1, 33-61.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMilliard, T. S. (2003). Overcoming Post-Colonial Myopia: a call to recognize and regulate Private Military Companies. Military Law Review, 176, 1-96.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMittelman, J. H. (2009). The Valence of Iraq? Globalization and the State. Globalizations, 6 (1), 113-119.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMorrissey, J. (2011). Liberal Lawfare and Biopolitics: US Juridical Warfare in the War on Terror. Geopolitics, 16 (2), 280-305.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMorton, J. S. (1999). The end of the cold war and international law: An empirical analysis. Global Society, 13 (1), 7-23.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMünkler, H. (2003). Viejas y nuevas guerras: Asimetría y privatización de la violencia. Madrid: Siglo XXI editores.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMusah, A.-F., & Fayemi, J. K. (2000). Mercenaries: An Adrican Security Dilemma. Londres: BGR: Pluto Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationNemeth, C. (2012). Private Security and the Law. Waltham: Elsevier.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationNicoll, A. (. (2007). Contractors in war: Blackwater case will test regulation. IISS Strategic Comments, 13 (9), 1-3.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationO'Brien, K. A. (1998). Military#advisory groups and African security: Privatized peacekeeping? International Peacekeeping, 5 (3), 78-105spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationO'Brien, K. A. (2000). PMCs, myths and mercenaries: The debate on private military companies. The RUSI Journal, 145 (1), 59-64.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationO'Brien, K. A. (2007). What Future, Privatized Military and Security Activities? . The RUSI Journal, 152 (2), 54-61.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationOlsson, C. (2003). Vrai procés et faux débats: perspectives critiques sur les argumentaires de légitimation des entreprises de coercition para-privées. Culture & Conflits, 52, 2-22.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationOnoma, A. K. (2014). Transition Regimes and Security Sector Reforms in Sierra Leone and Liberia. ANNALS, 656, 136-153.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationOnuf, N.G. (1989). World of our Making: Rules and Rule in Social Theory and International Relations. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationO'Reilly, C. (2011). "From Kidnaps to Contagious Diseases": Elite Rescue and the Strategic Expansion of the Transnational Security Consultancy Industry. International Political Sociology, 5, 178-197.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationOrr, A. (2011). Unleashing the Corporate Dogs of War. Defence Studies, 11 (3), 445-469.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationOrtiz, C. (2008). Private military contracting in weak states: Permeation or transgression of he new public management of security? African Security Review, 17 (2), 1-14.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationOrtiz, C. (2010). Private Armed Forces and Global Security. Santa Barbara: Praeger.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationOrtiz, C. (2010). The new public management of security: the contracting and managerial state and the private military industry. Public Money & Management, 30 (1), 35-41.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationOstensen, A. G. (2011). UN Use of Private Military and Security Companies: Practices and Policies. Geneva: The Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationOstensen, A. G. (2013). In the Business of Peace: The Political Influence of Private Military and Security Companies. International Peacekeeping, 20 (1), 33-47.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPaley, D. (2015). Drug War as Neoliberal Trojan Horse. Latin American Perspectives, 109-132.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPalma Morales, O. (2011). The Evolution of Counterinsurgency Warfare: A Historical Overview. Revista de Relaciones Internacionales, Estrategia y Seguridad, 6 (2), 195-220.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPampinella, S. (2012). Hegemonic Competition in Intrastate War: The Social Construction of Insurgency and Counterinsurgency in Iraq's al-Anbar Province. Conflict & Terrorism, 35 (2), 95-112.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPaparone, C. R. (2008). Where Military Professionalism Meets Complexity Science. Armed Forces & Society, 34 (3), 433-449.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationParker, G. (2001). El éxito nunca es definitivo: Imperialismo, guerra y fe en la Europa moderna. Madrid: Taurus.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPatel, F. (2013). Regulating Private Military and Security Companies: A comprehensive solution. ASIL Proceedings, 107, 201-203.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPatterson, M. H. (2011). A Theoretical Perspective on Privatized Security. International Studies Review, 13, 345-347.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPattison, J. (2011). The legitimacy of the military, private military and security companie, and just war. European Journal of Political Theory, 11 (2), 131-154.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPercy, S. (2003). This gun's for hire: a new look at an old issue. International Journal, 721-736.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPercy, S. (2007). Mercenaries: The History of a Norm in International Relations. Oxford: Oxford University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPerret, A. (2013). Privatization of the war on drugs in Mexico and Colombia: Limiting the Application of Humanitarian Law and Endangering Human Rights. Interdisciplinary Journal of Human Rights Law, 7 (1), 45-67.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPerrin, B. (2012). Mind the Gap: Lacunae in the International Legal Framework Governing Private Military and Security Companies. Criminal Justice Ethics, 31 (3), 213-232.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPerry, D. (2012). Blackwater vs. Bin Laden: The Private Sector's Role in American Counterterrorism. Comparative Strategy, 31 (1), 41-55.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPetersohn, U. (2011). The Other Side of the COIN: Private Security Companies and Counterinsurgency Operations . Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, 34 (10), 782-801.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPetersohn, U. (2012). The Effectiveness of Contracted Coalitions: Private Security Contractors in Iraq. Armed Forces & Society, 39 (3), 467-488.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPetersohn, U. (2014). Reframing the anti-mercenary norm: Private military and security companies and mercenarism. International Journal, 69 (4), 475-493.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPetersohn, U. (2014). The Impact of Mercernaries and Private Military and Security Companies on Civil War Severity between 1946 and 2002. International Interactions, 40 (2), 191-215.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPetersohn, U. (2015). Private Military and Security Companies (PMSCs), Military Effectiveness, and Conflict Severity in Weak States, 1990-2007. Journal Conflict Resolution, 1-27spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPetersohn, U. (2015). The social structure of the market for force. Cooperation and Conflict, 50 (2) , 269-285.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPhimister, I. R. (1974). Rhodes, Rhodesia and the Rand. Journal of Southern African Studies, 1 (1), 74-90.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPieterse, J. N. (2004). Neoliberal Empire. Theory, Culture & Society, 21 (3), 119-140.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPingeot, L. (2012). Dangerous Partnership: Private Military & Security Companies and the UN. New York: Global Policy Forum; Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPingeot, L. (2014). Contracting Insecurity: Private military and the security companies and the future of the United Nations. New York: Global Policy Forum; Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPolicante, A. (2013). The new pirate wars: the world market as imperial formation . Global Discourse, 3 (1), 52-71.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPorch, D. (2011). The dangerous myths and dubious promise of COIN. Small Wars & Insurgencies, 22 (2), 239-257.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPorch, D. (2014). Expendable soldiers. Small Wars & Insurgencies, 25 (3), 696-716.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPortada, R. A., Riley, J. H., & Gamone, M. D. (2014). Security sector reform in South Sudan: Identifying roles fro Private Military and Security Companies. Journal of Third World Studies, 31 (2), 151-178.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPosner, S. (2006). Security for Sale. The American Prospect, 17 (1), 28-33.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPozo Serrano, P. (2007). El uso de Compañías militares privadas en contextos de contrainsurgencia: problemas de legitimidad, gestión y control. Athena Intelligence Journal, 2 (4), 225-237.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPozo Serrano, P., & Hernández Martín, L. (2007). El Marco Jurídico de las CMSP. Reflexiones a propósito de la experiencia en Irak. A.E.D.I, 23, 315-351.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRadziszewski, E. (2013). Interpersonal Discussions and Attitude Formation on Foreign Policy: the Case of Polish Involvement in the Iraq War. Foreign Policy Analysis, 9, 103-123.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRempe, D. M. (2002). Counterinsurgency in Colombia: A United States National Security Perspective 1958-1966. Miami: UMI.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRenou, X. (2005). Private Military Companies Against Development. Oxford Development Studies, 33 (1), 107-115.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRich, P. B. (2014). A historical overview of US counter-insurgency. Small Wars &Insurgencies, 25 (1), 5-40.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRichani, N. (2005). Multinational Coroporations, Rentier Capitalism, and the War System in Colombia. Latin American Politics and Society, 113-144.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRipsman, N. M., & Paul, T. (2005). Globalization and teh National Security State: A Framework for Analysis. International Studies Review, 7, 199-227.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRodríguez Martínez, J. (2011). Métodos de investigación cualitativa. Silogismo, 8, 1-34.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRoggensack, M. (2013). U.S. Legislative and Regulative Developments and the International Code of Conduct for Private Security Providers: Filling the Accountability Gap? ASIL Proceedings, 107, 203-204.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRosas, M. C. (2004). ¿Privatización o privación de la seguridad? Metapolítica, 35, 88-98.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRose, P. (2012). Divinising Technology and Violence: Technopoly, the Warfare State, and the Revolution in Military Affairs . Journal of Contemporary Religion, 27 (3) , 365-381spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRosen, F. (2008). Commercial Security: Conditions of Growth. Security Dialogue, 39 (1), 77-91.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRosén, F. (2009). Third-Generation Civil-Military Relations. Security Dialogue, 40 (6), 597-616.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRosen, J. D., & Rosenau, J. N. (2014). The Losing War: Plan Colombia and Beyond. Albany: State University of New York.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRothe, D. L., & Ross, J. I. (2010). Private Military Contractors, Crime, and the Terrain of Unaccountability . Justice Quaterly, 27(4), 593-617.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRousseau, E. (2014). International Law and Private Military Companies: a Search for Clarity Droit International, sociétés militaires et conflit armé: Entre incertitudes et responsabilités. Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding, 8:1 , 99-104.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRueda-Santos, R. (2000). De la guardia de las fronteras a la contrainsurgencia: elementos de la evolución política e institucional del Ejército colombiano 1958-1965. Bogotá: ICFES.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationRuggiero, V. (2007). Privatizing International Conflict: War as Corporate Crime. Social Justice, 34 (3/4), 132-145.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSamet, E. D. (2005). Leaving No Warriors Behid: The Ancient Roots of a Modern Sensibility . Armed Forces & Society, 31 (4), 623-649.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSánchez Patrón, J. M. (2014). La Legitima Defensa ante la Piratería Marítima. Revista Electrónica de Estudios Internacionales, 28 , 1-39.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSaner, R. (2015). Private Military and Security Companies: Industry-Led Self-Regulatory Initiatives versus State-Led Containment Strategies. Geneva: The Graduate Institute Geneva Centre on Conflict, Development and peacebuilding.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationScahill, J. (2007). Blackwater: the rise of the world's most powerful mercenary army. Nueva York: Nation Books.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSchack, T. (2011). Twenty-first -century drug warrios: the press, privateers and the for-profit waging of the war on drugs. Media, War & Conflict, 4 (2), 142-161.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSchaud Jr, G. (2010). Civilian Combatants, Military Professionals? American Officer Judgements. Defence Studies, 10:3, 369-386.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSchmidinger, T. (2009). Tyrants and Terrorists: Reflections on the Connection between Totalitarianism, Neo-liberalism, Civil War and the Failure of the State in Iraq and Sudan. Civil Wars, 11 (3), 359-379.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSchmitt, C. (1966). Teoría del partisano: acotación al concepto de lo político. Madrid: Instituto de Estudios Políticos.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSchmitt, M. N. (2005). Humanitarian Law and Direct Participation in Hostilities by Private Contractors or Civilian Employees. Chicago Journal of International Law, 5, 511-546.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSchreier, F., & Caparini, M. (2005). Privatising Security: Law, Practice and Governance Private Military and Security Companies. Ginebra: Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationScott, P. D. (2011). Obama and Afghanistan: America's Drug Corrupted War. Critical Asian Studies, 43 (1), 111-138.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationShadnam, M. (2013). Heterologous and Homologus Perspectives on the Relation Between Morality and Organization: Illustration of Implications for Studing the Rise of Private Military and Security Industry. Journal of Management Inquiry, 23 (1), 22-37.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationShaw, M. N. (2008). International Law (6th edition). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationShearer, D. (1998). The expansion of the private military sector. The Adelphi Papers, 38 (316), 23-37.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationShearer, D. (1999). Private military force and challenges for the future. Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 13 (1), 80-94.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSherret, L. (2005). Futility in Action: Coca Fumigation in Colombia. Journal of Drug Issues 0022-0426, 151-168.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationShirk, M. (2016). "Bringind the State Back In" to The Empire Turn: Piracy and the Layered Sovereignty of the Eighteenth Century Atlantic. International Studies Review, 0, 1-23.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSinger, P. W. (2003). Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry and Its Ramifications for International Security. International Security, 26:3, 186-220.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSinger, P. W. (2005). Outsourcing War. Foreign Affairs, 119-132.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSinger, P. W. (2006). Humanitarian Principles, Private Military Agents: Implications of the Privatized Military Industry for the Humanitarian Community. Brown Journal of World Affairs, 13 (1), 105-121.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSinger, P. W. (2007). Can't Win With 'Em, Can't Go To War Without 'Em: Private Military Contractors and Counterinsurgency. s.l.: Foreign Policy at Brookings.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSmith, C. M. (2012). War for Profit. Army Contracting vs. Supporting the Troops. New York: Algora Publishing.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSoriano Rojas, R. (2013). Guía para realizar investigaciones sociales. México D.F.: Plaza y Valdés.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSpearin, C. (2000). A private security panacea? A specific response to mean times. Canadian Foreign Policy Journal, 7 (3), 67-80.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSpearin, C. (2003). American hegemony incorporated: the importance and implications of military contractors in Iraq. Contemporary Security Policy, 24 (3), 26-47spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSpearin, C. (2004). The Emperor's Leased Clothes: Military Contractors and their Implications in Combating International Terrorism. International Politics, 41, 243-264spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSpearin, C. (2007). Contracting a Counterinsurgency? Implications for US Policy in Iraq and Beyond . Small Wars & Insurgencies, 18 (4), 541-558.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSpearin, C. (2008). Private, Armed and Humanitarian? States, NGOs, International Private Security Companies and Shifting Humanitarianism. Security Dialogue, 39 (4), 363-382.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSpearin, C. (2009). Back to the Future? International private security companies in Darfur and the limits of the Executive outcomes example. International Journal, 1095-1106.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSpearin, C. (2010). What montreux means: Canada and the new regulation of the international private military and security industry. Canadian Foreign Policy, 16 (1), 1-15spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSpearin, C. (2011). UN Peacekeeping and the International Private Military and Security Industry. International Peacekeeping, 18 (2), 196-209.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSpringer, N. (2005). Desactivar la guerra: alternativas audaces para consolidar la paz. Bogotá D.C.: Aguilar.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationStachowitsch, S. (2013). Military Privatization and the Remasculinization of the State: Making the Link Between the Outsourcing of Military Security and Gendered State Transformations. International Relations, 27 (1), 74-94.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationStanger, A. (2009). One Nation under Contract: The Outsourcing of American Power and the Future of Foreign Policy. New Haven: Yale University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationStoker, D. (Military Advising and Assistance, from mercenary to privatization, 1815-2007). The history and evolution of foreign military advising and assistance, 1815-2007. En D. Stoker. Londres y Nueva York: Routledge.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationStone, J. (2004). Politics, Technology and the Revolution in Military Affairs . Journal of Strategic Studies, 27 (3), 408-427.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationStrachan-Morris, D. (2009). The Future of Civil-Military Intelligence Cooperation Based on Lessons Learned in Iraq. Intelligence and National Security, 24 (2), 257-274.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSullivan, J. P. (2002). Terrorism, Crime and Private Armies. Low Intensity Conflict & Law Enforcement, 11 (2/3), 239-253.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTarazona, J. (2008). El profeta de la muerte. Bogotá D.C.: Planeta.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTate, W. (2013). Congressional 'drug warrios' and U.S. policy towards Colombia. Critique of Antropology, 33 (2), 214-233.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTaylor, B. D., & Botea, R. (2008). Tilly Tally: War-Making and State-Making in the Contemporary Third World. International Studies Review, 10, 27-56.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTerry, J. P. (2010). Privatizing Defense Support Operations: The Need to Improve DoD's Oversight and Management. Armed Forces & Society, 36 (4), 660-670.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTeschke, B. (2002). Theorizing the Westphalian System of States: International Relations from Absolutism to Capitalism. European Journal of International Relations, 8 (1), 5-48.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationThe expansion of the private military sector. (1998). The Adelphi Papers, 38 (361), 23-37.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationThompson, J. E. (1994). Mercenaries, Pirates and Sovereigns: State-building and extraterritorial violence in early modern Europe. New Jersey: Princeton University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationThrosen, D. E., & Lie, A. (S.F. ). What is Neoliberalism? Oslo: University of Oslo.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTilly, C. (1990). Coercion, Capital, and European States, AD 990-1990. Cambridge: Basil Blackwell.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTogores, L.E. (2016). Historia de la Legión española: La infantería legendaria. De Africa a Afganistán. Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationToro, M. P., & Macías, A. (2012). Las compañías militares y de seguridad privada en Estados Fallidos: ¿una solución a la incapacidad estatal? Revista Opera, 205-219.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTrundle, M. (2004). Greek mercenaries: from the archaic period to Alexander. Nueva York y Londres: Routledge.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTurbiville Jr., G. H. (2006). Outlaw Private Security Firms: Criminal and Terrorist Agendas Undermine Private Security Alternatives. Global Crime, 7 (3), 561-582spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTurcan, M., & Ozpinar, N. (2009). "Who let the dogs out?": A critique of the security for hire option in weak states. Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict, 2:3, 143-171.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTzifakis, N. (2012). Contracting out to private military and security companies: the market for security services. European View, 11, 125-126.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationTzifakis, N., & Huilaras, A. (2015). The perils of oitsourcing post-conflict reconstruction: donor countries, international NGOs and private military and security companies. Conflict, Security & Development, 15 (1), 51-73spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationUnidas, N. (2002). Repercusiones de las actividades de los mercenarios sobre el derecho de los pueblos a la libre determinación. Ginebra-Nueva York: Naciones Unidas.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationUNLIREC. (2011). Control y Regulación de las Empresas de Seguridad Privada en América Latina y el Caribe: un análisis comparativo. Lima: Naciones Unidas.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJorge-Urbina, J. (2015). Actores no estatales y externalización de las funciones militares en los conflictos armados: los contratistas privados ante el derecho internacional humanitario. ACDI, 8, 41-85.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationUrueña Sánchez, M. I. (2009). El Dilema de la Hidra: evolución del paramilitarismo en Colombia desde una perspectiva explicativa. Bogotá D.C.: Ediciones grancolombianas.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationUrueña Sánchez, M. I. (2011). Leviatanes desnudos, piratas desbocados: Estados fallidos, nuevas guerras y derecho internacional de guerra. Bogotá D.C.: Universidad La Gran Colombia.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationUrueña Sánchez, M. I. (2019). Las compañías militares y de seguridad privadas ¿los nuevos mercenarios? Revista Criminalidad, 61 (1), 97-110.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationValencia Tello, D. C. (2016). La globalización y sus efectos en el derecho administrativo. Revista de Direito Brasileira, 13 (6), 190-212.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationVan Creveld, M. (1999). The Rise and Decline of the State. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationVan Meegdenburg, H. (2015). What the Research on PMSCs Discovered and Neglected: An Appraisal of the Literature . Contemporary Security Policy, 36 (2), 321-345.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationVillamizar Lamus, F. (2014). El Documento de Montreux: Derechos Humanos y Derecho Internacional Humanitario en las operaciones de Empresas Militares y de Seguridad Privadas. Revista Jurídica do Cesuca, 2 (4), 30-48.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationVillar, O., & Cottie, D. (2011). Cocaine, Death Squads , and the War on Terror: U.S. Imperialism and Class Struggle in Colombia. Nueva York: Monthly Review Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationVine, D. (2014). "We're Profiteers": How Military Contractors Reap Billions from U.S. Military Bases Overseas. Monthly Review, 66 (3), 82-102.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationVinten, R. (2015). The Morality of Private War: The Challenge of Private Military and Security Companies. Socialism and Democracy, 29 (1), 201-204.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationViotti, P. R., & Kauppi, M. V. (2012). International Relations Theory. Boston: Pearson.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWalker, C., & Whyte, D. (2005). Contracting out War?: Private Military Companies, Law and Regulation in the United Kingdom. The International and Comparative Law Quaterly, 54:3, 651-689.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWallace, D. A. (2011). International code of conduct for private security service providers . International Legal Materials, 50 (1), 89-104.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWarner, D. (2012). Establishing norms for Private Military and Security Companies. Denver International Law. & Politics, 106, 106-117.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWeber, M. (2002). Economía y Sociedad: Esbozo de sociología comprensiva. Madrid: Fondo de Cultura Económica.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWedel, J. R. (2005). U.S. Foreign Aid and Foreign Policy: Building Strong Relationships by Doing It Right! International Studies Perspectives, 6, 35-50.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWeiss, R. P. (2007). From Cowboys Detectives to Soldiers of Fortune: Private Security Contracting and Its Contradictions on the New Frontiers of Capitalist Expansion. Social Justice 34 (3-4), 1-19.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWelch, M. (2009). Fragmented power and state-corporate killings: a critique of Blackwater in Iraq. Crime Law Social Change, 51, 351-364.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWeldes, J. (1999). Constructing National Interests: The United States and the Cuban Missile Crisis. Minneapolis: Minnesota University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWendt, A. (1987). The Agent-Structure Problem in International Relations Theory. International Organization, 41 (3), 335-370.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWendt, A. (1992). Anarchy is what States Meke of it: The Social Construction of Power Politics . International Organization, 46 (2), 391-425.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWendt, A. (1999). Social Theory of International Politics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWhite, N. D. (2011). The Privatisation of Military and Security Functions and Human Rigts: Comments on the UN Working Group's Draft Convention. Human Rights Law Review, 11 (1), 133-151.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWhyte, D. (2003). Lethal Regulation: State-Corporate Crime and the United Kingdom Government's New Mercenaries. Journal of Law and Society, 30 (4), 575-600.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWilliams, M. C. (2010). The Public, the Private and the Evolution of Security Studies. Security Dialogue, 41 (6), 623-630.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWirls, D. (2010). Irrational Security: The Politics of Defense from Reagan to Obama . Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWolf, K. D., Deitelhoff, N., & Engert, S. (2007). Corporate Security Responsibility: Towards a Cocneptual Framework for a Comparative Research Agenda. Cooperation and Conflict: Journal of the Nordic International Studies, 42 (3), 294-320.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWoods, K. (2011). Ceasefire capitalism: military-private partnerships, resource concessions and military-state building in the Burma-China borderlands. The Journal of Peasant Studies, 38 (4), 747-770.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationZabci, F. (2015). Private military companies: 'Shadow soldiers' of neo-colonialism. Capital & Class, 92, 1-10.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationZabyelina, Y., & Kustova, I. (2015). Energy and conflict: Security outsourcing in the protection of critical energy infrastructures. Cooperation and Conflict, 50 (4), 531-549spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationZedeck, R. (2007). Private military/security companies, human security, and state building in Africa . African Security Review, 16 (4), 97-104.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationZedong, M. (1967). Sobre la guerra popular. Pekín: Ediciones en lenguas extranjerasspa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationZedong, M. (1989). Selección de escritos militares. Pekín: Ediciones en lenguas extranjeras.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationZhang, Y., & Liu, H. (2010). On the Basic Reasons of Private War. Journal of Politics and Law, 3 (2), 134-139.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationZunes, S. (2009). The US Invasion of Iraq: The Military Side of Globalization. Globalizations, 6 (1), 99-105.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAvant, D. (2013). Private Security . En P. D. Williams, Security Studies (págs. 425-438). Nueva York: Routledge.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBarreto, J. M. (2017) Cerberus: Rethinking Grotius and the Westfalian System. En M. Koskenniemi, W. Rech & M. Jiménez Fonseca, International Law and Empire (págs. 149-176). Oxford: Oxford University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBennett, A. & Elman, C. (2008). Historical Methods. En The Oxford Handbook Of International Relations. (págs. 518-538). Oxford: Oxford University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBerndtsson, J. (2009). The Privatisation of Security and State Control of Force. En K. a. Aggestam, War and Peace in Transition: Changing Roles of External Actors. (págs. 53-71). Lund: Nordic Academic Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCook, D. A. (2004). U.S. Southern Command: General Charles E. Wilhelm and the Shaping of U.S. Military Engagement in Colombia. En D. S. Reveron, America's Viceroys: The Military and U.S. Foreign Policy (págs. 127-160). Gordonsville: Palgrave MacMillanspa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDufour, F. G., & Gheller, F. (2010). La théorie critique. En A. MacLeod, & D. O'Meara, Théories des relations internationales: contestations et résistences (págs. 293-314). Outrement: Athénaspa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDufour, F. G., & Lapointe, T. (2010). La sociologie historique néomarxiste. En A. MacLeod, & D. O'Meara, Théories des relations internationales: contestations et résistences (págs. 403-420). Outrement: Athéna.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDunn, K. C. (2008). Historical Representations. En A. Klotz, & D. Prakash, Qualitative Methods in International Relations: a pluralist guide (págs. 78-92). Nueva York: Palgrave McMillanspa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationEckert, A. E. (2014). Private Military Companies and the Reasonable Chance of Success. En C. E. Gentry, & A. E. Eckert, Studies in Security and International Affairs: Future of Just War: New Critical Essays (págs. 60-75). Athens: University of Georgia Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationElsea, J. K., & Serafino, N. M. (2010). Private Security Contractors in Iraq: Background, Legal Status and Other Issues. En J. L. Jones, J. K. Elsea, & N. M. Serafino, Defense, Security and Strategies: Security in Iraq (págs. 139-169). Nueva York: Nova.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFrance, J. (2008). Mercenaries and Paid Men.The Mercenary Identity in the middle ages. En K. De Vries, Mercenaries and Paid Men.The Mercenary Identity in the middle ages (págs. 1-15). Holanda: Koninklijke Brill.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHermann, M. G. (2008). Content Analysis. En A. Klotz, & D. Pakash, Qualitative Methods in International Relations: A pluralist guide (págs. 151-167). Nueva York: Palgrave McMillan.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationÍñiguez Rueda, L. (2006). El análisis del discurso en las ciencias sociald. En L. Íñiguez Rueda, Análisis del discurso: Manual para las ciencias sociales.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationÍñiguez Rueda, L. (2006). El análisis del discurso en las ciencias sociales: variedades, tradiciones y práctica. En L. Íñiguez Rueda, Análisis del discurso: Manual para las ciencias sociales (págs. 57-88). Barcelona: UOC.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJepperson, R. L.; Wendt, A., & Katzenstein, P. J. (1996). Norms, Identity and Culture in National Security. En P.J. Katzenstein, The Culture of National Security: Nomrs and Identity in World Politics (págs. 18-52). Nueva York: Columbia University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJorgensen, K.E. (2001). Four Levels and a Discipline. En K.M. Fierke & K.E. Jorgensen, Constructing International Relations: the next generation (págs. 36-53). Londres & Nueva York: Routledgespa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKowert P., & Legro, J. (1996). Norms, Identity and Their Limits: A Theoretical Reprise. En P.J. Katzenstein, The Culture of National Security: Norms and Identity in World Politics (págs. 356-401). Nueva York: Columbia University Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationLeander, A. (2009). Disagreements about International Regulation of Private Armies. En K. A. Aggestam, War and Peace in Transition: Changing Roles of External Actors (págs. 32-52). Lund: Nordic Academic Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMartín Rojo, L. (2006). El análisis crítico del discurso. Fronteras y exclusión social en los discursos racistas. En L. Íñiguez Rueda, Análisis del discurso: manual para las ciencias sociales (págs. 117-140). Barcelona: OUC.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMcLeod, A., & O'Meara, D. (2010). Qu'est-ce qu'une théorie des relations internationales? En A. Mcleod, & D. O'Meara, Theories des relations internationales, contestations et résistances (págs. 1-18). Outremont: Athéna.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMusah, A.-F., & Fayemi, J. K. (2000). Africa in Search of Security: Mercenaries and Conflicts - An Overview . En A.-F. Musah, & J. K. Fayemi, Mercenaries: An African Security Dilemma (págs. 13-42). London: Pluto Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationO'Meara, D. (2010). Le constructivisme. En A. MacLeod, & D. O'Meara, Théories des relations internationales: contestations et résistances (págs. 244-268). Montréal: Athéna Editions.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationOsterud, O. (2008). The New Military Revolution - From Mercenaries to Outsourcing. En M. Healand & O. Osterud (eds.), Denationalisation of Defense: Privatisation and Internationalisation (págs. 13-44). Abingdon: Ashgate Publishing Group.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSater, W. F. (2008). The impact of foreign advisors on Chile´s armed forces, 1810-2005. En D. Stoker, Military Advising and Assitance, From mercenaries to privatization, 1815-2007 (págs. 26-41). Londres y Nueva York: Routledge.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSoeters, J. (2013). Odysseus Prevails over Achilles. En J. Burk, How 9/11 Changed Our Ways of War (págs. 89-115). Palo Alto: Stanford Security Studies.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSorrell, L. A. (2010). U.S. Companies, Their Employees & Violence in Columbia Hearing-Guzman Testimony. En L. A. Sorrell, Colombia: U.S. Relations and Issues (págs. 285-304). Hauppage: Nova Science Publishers.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationSteinhoff, U. (2011). Ethics and Mercenaries. En P. Tripodl, & J. (. Wofendale, New Wars and New Soldiers: Military Ethics in the Contemporary World (págs. 137-151). Famham: Ashgate Publising Ltd.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationStoker, D. (2006). The Evolution of Foreign Military Assistance, 1815-2005. En K. D. Gott, & M. G. Brooks, Security Assistance: U.S. and International Historical Perspectives. Washington: Combat Studies Institute Press.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJorge-Urbina, J. (2008). El papel de las compañías militares y de seguridad privadas en los conflictos armados recientes: una aproximación al estatuto jurídico de su personal en el derecho internacional humanitario. En J. J. Fernández Rodríguez, J. Jordán Enamorado, & D. Sansó-Rubert Pascual, Seguridad y Defensa Hoy: construyendo el futuro (págs. 141-176). Madrid: Plaza y Valdés.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationZehfuss, Maja (2001). Constructivisms in IR: Wendt, Onuf and Kratochwil. En K.M. Fierke & K.E. Jorgensen, Constructing International Relations: the next generation (págs. 54-75). Londres & Nueva York: Routledge.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAdamo, A. (2013). Intervento neo-mercenario o peacekeeping regionale? Un confronto tra Private Military Companies ed ECOMOG in Sierra Leone. (tesis de doctorado), Universitá Degli Studi di Cagliari,Cagliari, Italia.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAlabarda, Y., & Lisowiec, R. (2007). The Private Military Firms -Historical Evolution and Industry Analysis. (trabajo de grado de maestría), Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, Estados Unidos.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationAndersen, A. H., et. al. (2015). Privatization of Security: The outsourcing of Power and Violence. (trabajo de grado de maestría), Roskilde University, Roskilde, Dinamarca.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBak, C. et al. (2013). The effects of Private Military and Security Actors. (trabajo de grado de maestría), Rosklide University, Roskilde, Dinamarca.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBerndtsson, J. (2009). The Privatisation of Security and State Control of Force. (tesis doctoral), University of Gothemburg, Gotemburgo, Sueciaspa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBjoveit, P. (2008). Treath or Asset?: How Private Security Companies and Private Military Companies affect the US Monopoly on Legitime Force. (trabajo de grado de maestría), Universitetet I Oslo, Oslo, Noruega.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationBoone, M. D. (2011). Private Military Companies and State Sovereignty: An English School Approach to Regulations and its Consequences. (trabajo de grado de maestría), Dalhouise University, Halifax, Canadáspa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationClark, M. K. (2008). In the company of soldiers: private security companies' impact on military effectiveness and the democratic advantage. (tesis doctoral), Cornell University, Cornell, Estados Unidos.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationCoufal, L. (2007). More than Mercenaries? Mercenaries, Sierra Leone, and the Rise of Private Military Companies. (trabajo de grado de maestría), The University of British Columbia, Vancuver, Canadá.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationDrutschmann, S. (s.f.). Motivation, Markets and Client Relations in the British Private Security Industry. (tesis doctoral), King´s College, Londres, Reino Unido.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationFossum Havnelid, L. (2006). Private Military Companies and Home State Interest: Conflict or Convergence? (trabajo de grado de maestría), University of Oslo, Oslo, Noruega.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationGlanville, L. (2003). Norms, Interest and Humanitarian Intervention. (trabajo de grado de maestría), University of Sidney, Sidney, Australia.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHalpin, A. (2011). US Government Outsourcing, the Private Military Industry, and Operation Iraqi Freedom: A Case Study in Conflict Contracting. (trabajo de grado de maestría), University of Kansas, Kansas City, Estados Unidos.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationHickey, N. (2014). Neoliberalism and Public Sector Reform: Explaining Private Military Contracting in the United States. (trabajo de grado de maestría), University of Tromso, Tromso, Noruega.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationIris, C. M. (2009). Armed Contractors on the Battlefield: Coordination Issues in Iraq between the U.S. Military and Private Security Contractors. (trabajo de grado de maestría), University of Miami, Ann Arbor, Estados Unidos.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationJorgensen, B. M. (2005). Outsourcing Small Wars: Expanding the role of Private Military Companies in U.S. Military Operations. (tesis doctoral), Naval Posgraduate School, Monterey, Estados Unidos.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationKoroleva, A. (2014). Las Empresas Militares y de Seguridad Privadas en los conflictos armados desde la perspectiva del derecho internacional . (trabajo de grado de maestría), Universidad Carlos III, Madrid, España.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMatteo, D. (2015). The use of private military and security companies in international society: contestation and legitimation of state practice. (tesis doctoral), University of Westminster, Londres, Reino Unido.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationMilkeraityté, K. (2008). Private Military and Security Companies and their personnel in the context o International Humanitarian Law. (trabajo de grado de maestría), Mykolas Romeris University, Vilna, Lituania.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationO'Brien, J. M. (2008). Private military companies an assessment. (tesis doctoral), Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, Estados Unidos.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationPrentiss Shores III, H. (2008). Fillimg the Void: Private Security Providers and Their Implications for Military Operations in Irak and Beyond. (trabajo de grado de maestría), Florida State University, Miami, Estados Unidos.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationVarin, C. (2012). Mercenaries and the State: How the hybridisation of the armed forces is changing the face of national security. (tesis doctoral), London School of Economics and Political Science, Londres, Reino Unido.spa
dc.source.bibliographicCitationWirtz, C. C. (2016). Blackwater versus Blackbeard: Which international regulation exist for the use of private maritime security companies in vessel protection operations? (trabajo de grado de maestría), Univeristy of Cape Town, Ciudad del Cabo, Sudáfricaspa
dc.source.instnameinstname:Universidad del Rosariospa
dc.source.reponamereponame:Repositorio Institucional EdocURspa
dc.subjectMercenariosspa
dc.subjectCompañías Militares y de Seguridad Privadasspa
dc.subjectDerecho Internacional Humanitariospa
dc.subjectDerechos Humanosspa
dc.subject.ddcOtros problemas & servicios socialesspa
dc.subject.keywordMercenariesspa
dc.subject.keywordPrivate Military and Security Companiesspa
dc.subject.keywordInternational Humanitarian Lawspa
dc.subject.keywordHuman Rightsspa
dc.subject.keywordWeb of Normsspa
dc.subject.lembMercenariosspa
dc.subject.lembServicios de seguridad privadaspa
dc.subject.lembFuerzas armadasspa
dc.subject.lembDerecho Internacional Humanitariospa
dc.titleMercenarios y compañías militares y de seguridad privadas : estructuración de sus redes normativasspa
dc.typedoctoralThesiseng
dc.type.documentAnálisis de casospa
dc.type.hasVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
dc.type.spaTesis de doctoradospa
Archivos
Bloque original
Mostrando1 - 1 de 1
Cargando...
Miniatura
Nombre:
UruenaSanchez-MarioIvan.pdf
Tamaño:
2.6 MB
Formato:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Descripción:
Documento principal