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Private Security: In the Public Interest?

“Private Security: In the Public Interest?” is available in Paperback format. Also available as a Digital Download (PDF).

Topics include:

  • Policing and Nation

  • ‘Crime as a normal social fact’: Anxiety, Insecurity, and the Fear of Crime

  • Private Security as a Commodity and the Effect on the Collective

  • Private Security: Creating a New Style of Policing?

Society has undergone extensive changes in recent times. The decline in social capital and sense of community has brought great challenges to state policing through an ever-expanding range of demands placed upon them by its citizens. This decline has led to many informal social controls becoming ineffective and has led to citizens forsaking the concept of ‘community’ for individualism. This has led to a balkanisation in policing needs and has created an insatiable need for security that the public police struggle to meet.

The question is how do we ease this pressure? The private security sector predates and now exists alongside the public police and may provide one solution in tackling the increasing demands for policing. The validity of the use of private sector personnel in policing will be studied, specifically in relation to the psychological effects of crime, more commonly known as the ‘fear of crime’.

The negative impact of private sector involvement will also be examined with questions being asked as to whether the commodification of security is ultimately harmful to what is left of the collective. The central focus of this book will conclude if private security serves the public interest by mitigating the effects of individualism or if it merely encourages them, and in what way (if any) this is different from the public police.