International involvement in (re-)building police forces: a comparison of US and UN police assistance programs around the world

IF 0.9 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Cameron Mailhot, Michael Kriner, S. Karim
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT The US and UN are two of the largest patrons of police reform programs worldwide: between 2000 and 2020, the US provided approximately $160 billion in police assistance to more than 130 countries worldwide; simultaneously, the UN spent over $77 billion supplying police-oriented security sector reform to countries experiencing or having experienced armed conflict, doing so through the deployment of peacekeeping missions and within the offices of UN Police, the UN’s hub for police reform and training programs. Though these two providers seek the same overall objective, they often vary in their specific goals: the US often engages in foreign police reform to promote its own national security objectives by increasing institutional capacity, while the UN adopts police reform programs to promote institutional constraint. The two models have important implications for how we understand bilateral and multilateral reform programs, including activities performed and recipient countries targeted across both time and space. Using originally collected data on US security assistance programs as well as a careful analysis of original data on UN mandates, this article provides the first quantitative exploration of these two different modes of assistance, comparing and contrasting their objectives and where, when, and how they are provided.
国际参与(重建)警察部队:美国和联合国在世界各地的警察援助计划的比较
摘要美国和联合国是全球警察改革计划的两个最大赞助者:2000年至2020年间,美国向全球130多个国家提供了约1600亿美元的警察援助;与此同时,联合国花费了770多亿美元,通过部署维和特派团以及在联合国警察办公室(联合国警察改革和培训项目的中心)内,向经历或曾经经历过武装冲突的国家提供以警察为导向的安全部门改革。尽管这两个提供者寻求相同的总体目标,但他们的具体目标往往不同:美国经常参与外国警察改革,通过提高机构能力来促进自己的国家安全目标,而联合国则通过警察改革计划来促进机构约束。这两个模式对我们如何理解双边和多边改革计划具有重要意义,包括在时间和空间上开展的活动和针对的受援国。本文利用最初收集的美国安全援助计划数据,以及对联合国授权原始数据的仔细分析,首次对这两种不同的援助模式进行了定量探索,比较和对比了它们的目标以及在哪里、何时和如何提供。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Small Wars and Insurgencies
Small Wars and Insurgencies INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
25.00%
发文量
65
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