Date of Publication

12-6-2024

Document Type

Master's Thesis

Degree Name

Master of Arts in International Studies major in Asian Studies

Subject Categories

Asian Studies

College

College of Liberal Arts

Department/Unit

International Studies

Thesis Advisor

Charmaine Misalucha Willoughby

Defense Panel Chair

Elaine Nicolas Tolentino

Defense Panel Member

Jonathan Gabriel M. Mendoza
Don McLain Gil

Abstract/Summary

States are the sole authorities in the monopoly of violence. However, they are not immune to the challenges posed by non-state actors, such as Private Military and Security Companies (PMSCs). While the existence and rise of PMSCs are heavily influenced by security privatization and ambiguity in international law, the activities of Russia and the Wagner Group raised questions regarding the utility and effect of PMSCs in the foreign policy of other nations as they pursue their interests with impunity. The utilization of PMSCs is often associated with plausible deniability, which makes them a suitable alternative for proxy war policies. The exposure of the Wagner Group’s activities and the Russian government’s acknowledgment of Russian PMSCs’ prerogative to contribute to its national interests present a new dimension on how PMSCs challenge the monopoly of violence. This research argues that state utilization of PMSCs as proxies challenges the monopoly of violence. The concept is anchored in the assumption that a state’s engagement in proxy war policies using PMSCs is a threat to the state’s authority on the use of legitimate force, both to the state utilizing the PMSC and to the state or actors whom the use of PMSCs is intended to. This research utilizes Buzan and Wæver’s securitization theory to analyze how PMSCs could threaten and challenge the state’s monopoly of violence. This research used the method of structured, focused comparison to examine the cases and revealed the variation of how PMSCs threatened states’ monopoly of violence.

Abstract Format

html

Language

English

Format

Electronic

Keywords

Private military companies; Private security services; Mercenary troops

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Embargo Period

12-13-2025

Available for download on Saturday, December 13, 2025

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