Content
November 2024, Volume 35, Issue 8
- 1295-1334 ‘Havoc the laws of regular warfare do not sanction:’ the resort to punitive violence by British forces in Victorian small wars
by Parker Hempel & M.L.R. Smith - 1335-1359 The grand strategy of a non-Western small state: Sri Lanka and the LTTE during 2006-2009
by Shlomi Yass - 1360-1396 Black Sea, grain, and two humanitarian corridors: unblocking Ukrainian shipping amid the Russian invasion
by Borys Kormych & Tetyana Averochkina & Liudmyla Kormych - 1397-1416 Jihadist sniper culture: propagandising the ‘caliphate’ through the crosshair
by Pieter Nanninga - 1417-1445 The nature and extent of the Taliban’s involvement in the drug trade before and after the regime change (1994–2022): insights from experts
by Hamid Azizi - 1446-1466 The killing fields of Punjab: representing the Sikh militancy in cinema
by C. Christine Fair & Harshiv Mahajan - 1467-1499 Roles of gender in addressing structural inequality: assessment of Borana women’s endogenous institutional agents of gender amelioration in peace, conflict, and post-conflict settings
by Tesfaye Gudeta Gerba & Gutema Imana Keno & Mulu Berhanu Hundera & Fekadu Adugna Tufa - 1500-1502 Contemporary wars and conflicts over land and water in africa
by Lawrence E. Cline - 1502-1506 Friend or Foe: militia intelligence and ethnic violence in the Lebanese Civil War
by Lawrence E. Cline - 1506-1508 The Taliban courts in Afghanistan: waging war by law
by Ahmed Sahal K P
October 2024, Volume 35, Issue 7
- 1123-1150 The impact of precision strike technology on the warfare of non-state armed groups: case studies on Daesh and the Houthis
by Max Mutschler & Marius Bales & Esther Meininghaus - 1151-1178 Conflict and democratization in Afghanistan
by S. Yaqub Ibrahimi - 1179-1211 Fighting together: emotionality, fusion, and psychological kinship in the Syrian civil war
by Rahaf Aldoughli - 1212-1232 Women, extremism and repression under Taliban 2.0 in Afghanistan: beyond the good
by Zahoor Ahmad Wani - 1233-1259 Encounters with ISIS-affiliated women: radicalisation process, motivations, and their journey
by Gulfer Ulaş - 1260-1284 Unheard voices: foreign journalists’ coverage of Vietnamese prisoners during the American War in Vietnam
by Marcel Berni - 1285-1289 Russia in Africa: resurgent great power or bellicose pretender?
by Paul B. Rich - 1289-1293 Subversion: from covert operations to cyber conflict
by Lawrence E. Cline
August 2024, Volume 35, Issue 6
- 949-983 Repress, coopt, persuade? Russia’s counterinsurgency warfare from Kabul to Kyiv
by Mason W. Krusch - 984-996 The Israel-Hamas conflict: ‘You might not be interested in attrition, but attrition is interested in you’
by Amos C. Fox - 997-1023 Mortal ‘mistakes’, fatal consequences: understanding Nigeria’s mis-targeted counter-insurgency airstrike fatalities
by Al Chukwuma Okoli & Azeez O. Olaniyan & Rasheed T. Ayegbusi - 1024-1049 Elite Coalitions and Rebel Control in Northern Côte d’Ivoire
by Jeremy S. Speight - 1050-1078 Selling security to Africa: private military and security companies (PMSCs) and the fate of African intrastate security
by Thomas Ameyaw-Brobbey & Vladimir Antwi-Danso - 1079-1104 Conditions for enduring peace: power-sharing and amnesty provisions
by Jaeseok Cho - 1105-1109 A Slow Reckoning: the USSR, the Afghan communists, and Islam
by Lawrence E. Cline - 1110-1115 An unwritten future: realism and uncertainty in world politics
by Paul B. Rich - 1115-1118 The troubled triangle: US–Pakistan relations under the Taliban’s shadow
by Muhammad Asad Latif - 1118-1121 Blue Helmet Bureaucrats: United Nations Peacekeeping and the reinvention of colonialism, 1945–1971
by Mujeeb Kanth
July 2024, Volume 35, Issue 5
- 747-776 Azerbaijan’s power plays: analyzing Baku’s policy towards Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh after 2020
by Mushegh Ghahriyan & Veronika Torosyan & Anush Harutyunyan - 777-806 The application of ‘Small Wars’ theory and experience by the British Army in Macedonia during the First World War
by Jake Gasson - 807-837 South America: small wars, insurgencies & aerial acquisition programs
by Wilder Alejandro Sanchez - 838-864 Fear as a product, continuum as a solution: the role of private companies in the transnational diffusion of zero tolerance policing to Brazil
by Alcides Eduardo Dos Reis Peron & Tomaz Oliveira Paoliello - 865-895 Uncovering the sources of revolutionary violence: the case of Colombia’s National Front (1958-1964)
by Oliver Dodd - 896-918 War within a war: Labour Corps and local response in Chin Hills during the First World War
by Pum Khan Pau - 919-939 Armed opposition to the Stroessner regime in Paraguay: a review article
by Andrew Nickson - 940-948 Review essay: proxy warfare and mercenaries
by Lawrence E. Cline
May 2024, Volume 35, Issue 4
- 545-572 Hunting the watchmen the Ulster Defence Regiment and IRA strategy
by Daniel Chesse - 573-595 Prima Donnas in Kevlar zones. Challenges to the Unconventional Warfare efforts of the U.S. Special Forces during Operation Enduring Freedom
by Anna M. Gielas - 596-621 State survival vs leaders’ survival: how ethnic conflicts affect a state’s international alignment behavior
by Azar Babayev & Kavus Abushov - 622-655 From alliance to ‘soft conquest’: the anatomy of the Turkish-Azerbaijani military alliance before and after the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war
by Levon Hovsepyan & Artyom A. Tonoyan - 656-677 From rebel leaders to post-war intermediaries: evidence from Southern Syria
by Abdullah Al-Jabassini - 678-709 Local circumstances matter: the story of two peasant resistances in northwestern Ethiopia from 1974 to 1991
by Dejenie Fikremaryam - 710-735 Mughal amphibious counterinsurgency in the Bay of Bengal’s hinterland: 1572-1612
by Kaushik Roy - 736-745 Making the world safe for empire?
by Paul B Rich
April 2024, Volume 35, Issue 3
- 377-398 Urban warfare in the middle East: the battle of Mosul and the operations in Syria
by Andrea Beccaro - 399-429 Autonomous cooperation: types of alliances between communities and combatants in civil wars
by Daniel Gómez-Uribe - 430-452 Was Gerry Adams a transformational leader?
by Michael Flavin - 453-477 ‘Only a tree stands still to be cut down’: discoursing legitimation in narratives of the Nigeria-Biafra war and the IPOB movement (1967 to present)
by Adeiza Isiaka - 478-506 Parmanu: the story of Pokhran (2018)- the saffronization of India’s quest for a nuclear weapon
by C. Christine Fair - 507-535 Bollywood, Maratha imperialism and Hindu nationalism
by Kaushik Roy - 536-541 Westphalia from below: humanitarian intervention and the myth of 1648
by Paul B Rich - 541-543 Mass atrocities and the police: A new history of ethnic cleansing in Bosnia and Herzegovina
by Lawrence E. Cline
February 2024, Volume 35, Issue 2
- 191-227 Conflict contagion via weapons proliferation out of collapsed states
by Kerry Chávez & Ori Swed - 228-255 The bandits’ world: recruitment strategies, command structure and motivations for mass casualty attacks in northwest Nigeria
by Oluwole Ojewale - 256-283 Towards “modern” counterinsurgency in Sub-Saharan Africa: lessons learnt from Nigeria and Mozambique
by Jakub Zbytovsky & Jan Prouza - 284-311 The conceptual and doctrinal evolution on irregular warfare in Türkiye: 1919-1952
by Arman Sert & Cenker Korhan Demir - 312-337 Insurgent movements and paths to negotiation: a case study of the National Democratic Front of Boroland (NDFB) in India’s northeast
by Jimmy Sebastian Daimary & Pahi Saikia - 338-361 The Catalan separatist insurrection armament of 1926 in the shadow of the Irish armed decade
by Joan Esculies - 362-364 The Iranian revolutionary guard corps: defining Iran’s military doctrine
by Lawrence E. Cline - 364-368 Atrocity labelling: from crimes against humanity to genocide studies
by Paul B. Rich - 368-371 The counterinsurgent imagination: a new intellectual history
by Mujeeb Kanth - 371-375 The Greek revolution: 1821 and the making of modern Europe
by Marina Eleftheriadou
January 2024, Volume 35, Issue 1
- 1-1 Correction
by The Editors - 1-26 When Militias capture the state: evidence from Lebanon, Iraq, and Sudan
by Federico Manfredi Firmian - 27-50 Conflict in early medieval Ireland, Adomnán of Iona and the law of the Innocents (697 AD): an early Law of war
by James W. Houlihan - 51-79 Unholy alignment and boomerang civil conflicts: Examining how conflicts beget conflicts through external states support for rebels
by Thomas Ameyaw-Brobbey - 80-117 Rwanda’s War in Mozambique: Road-Testing a Kigali Principles approach to counterinsurgency?
by Ralph Shield - 118-146 Negotiating ‘Hearts and Minds’: conflict, infrastructure, and community support in Colombia
by Clara Voyvodic - 147-172 ‘A guide for measuring resiliency and resistance’
by Robert S. Burrell & John Collison - 173-176 Uncivil war: the British army and the troubles, 1966-1975
by Geraint Hughes - 177-181 Memory Makers: The politics of the past in Putin’s Russia, by Jade McGlynn and Russia against modernity, by Alexander Etkind
by Paul B. Rich - 181-183 Book review - proxy war in Yemen
by Melvyn Fookes - 184-186 Zone of rebellion: Kurdish insurgents and the Turkish state
by Berkan Özgür - 186-190 Botha, Smuts and the great war
by Paul B Rich
November 2023, Volume 34, Issue 8
- 1383-1399 Introduction
by Paul B Rich - 1400-1428 Environmental dimensions of conflict and paralyzed responses: the ongoing case of Ukraine and future implications for urban warfare
by Kristina Hook & Richard Marcantonio - 1429-1457 Environment and armed conflict in Colombia: terrorist attacks against water resources and oil infrastructure in Norte de Santander (2010-2020)
by Jerónimo Ríos & Julio C. González & Mariano García de las Heras - 1458-1485 Multinational Joint Task Force’s counterinsurgency in the Lake Chad Basin and the consequences of Chadian exit for the Northeast, Nigeria
by Nsemba Edward Lenshie & Patience Kondu Jacob & Confidence Nwachinemere Ogbonna & Buhari Shehu Miapyen & Paul Onuh & Aminu Idris & Christian Ezeibe - 1486-1500 Pastoralist, farmers and desertification induced conflict in North Central and Southern Nigeria
by Ismail Bello & Sophia Kazibwe - 1501-1531 High-modernist intervention and the prolonged frontier conflict in Metekel, North-West Ethiopia: the case of the grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam
by Dagnachew Ayenew Yeshiwas & Gutema Imana Keno & Tsega Endale Etefa & Tompson Makahamadze - 1532-1557 Chinese Private Security Companies and the limit of coercion
by Ricardo Pereira & Ana Luquett & Rui Forte & Mohammad Eslami
October 2023, Volume 34, Issue 7
- 1205-1234 Potemkin on the Dnieper: the Failure of Russian Airpower in the Ukraine war
by Sean M. Wiswesser - 1235-1270 From gray zone to conventional warfare: the Russia-Ukraine conflict in the Black Sea
by Borys Kormych & Tetyana Malyarenko - 1271-1294 Friend and Foe: Russia–Turkey relations before and after the war in Ukraine
by Vicken Cheterian - 1295-1321 Exploring factors and implications of violence against civilians: a case study of the Soviet-Afghan war
by Justin Magula - 1322-1342 Sergei Loznitsa, ethereal documentarian: untangling the Russia-Ukraine war in the Kiev Trial, Donbass, and Maidan
by Bianca Berman - 1343-1362 The challenges of military adaptation to the cyber domain: a case study of the Netherlands
by Max Smeets - 1363-1381 Chinese war in Southeast Asia’s Frontier: contesting Kokang’s Chinese identity on Myanmar-China Border conflict
by Danny Widiatmo & Abellia Anggi Wardani
August 2023, Volume 34, Issue 6
- 1043-1071 Mapping premodern small war: The case of the Thirty Years War (1618-48)
by Peter H. Wilson & Katerina Tkacova & Thomas Pert - 1072-1094 Insurgencies & organized crime: the essential elements of information
by Lawrence E. Cline - 1095-1129 Narco drones: tracing the evolution of cartel aerial tactics in Mexico’s low-intensity conflicts
by Ghaleb Krame & Vlado Vivoda & Amanda Davies - 1130-1153 Security in the Lake Chad Basin and Sahel region after Idris Déby
by Chukwuma Rowland Okoli & Bernard U. Nwosu & Francis N. Okpaleke & Ezenwa E. Olumba - 1154-1179 Rewriting the rules of land reform: counterinsurgency and the property rights gap in wartime Nicaragua
by Rachel A. Schwartz - 1180-1203 Counterinsurgency as order-making: refining the concepts of insurgency and counterinsurgency in light of the Somali civil war
by Michael Weddegjerde Skjelderup & Mukhtar Ainashe
July 2023, Volume 34, Issue 5
- 883-895 Introduction
by Paul B Rich - 896-918 Guerrillas in our midst: Reflections on the British experience of counter-insurgency in popular fiction
by Geraint Hughes - 919-941 Interrogating the myth of the Irish republican hero: a syntactic analysis of hunger (2008) and the wind that shakes the barley (2006)
by Samuel Schiffer - 942-961 Peace suspended by a sword: honor & justifications of violence in Breaker Morant
by J.B. Potter - 962-984 The soldier as victim and aggressor: subverting the hero soldier in Apocalypse Now, Dien Bien Phu, and White Badge
by Bianca Berman - 985-1006 The utilization of special forces in peace missions: perspectives from South Africa
by Louis Bester - 1007-1039 A light footprint in Syria: operational art in operation inherent resolve
by Bo Arnold & John Nagl - 1040-1042 The insurgent’s dilemma: A struggle to prevail
by Nelson Kasfir
May 2023, Volume 34, Issue 4
- 747-758 ‘The Fall of Afghanistan: An American Tragedy’
by Robert S. Snyder - 759-779 Power projection of Middle East states in the Horn of Africa: linking security burdens with capabilities
by Federico Donelli & Brendon J. Cannon - 780-802 Non-state actors and modern technology
by Andrea Beccaro - 803-827 ‘Shaping hearts and minds: claret operations in Borneo, 1965–1966’
by Christopher Tuck - 828-852 The strategic logic of policing in British India
by Harrison Akins - 853-881 ‘Destructors’ in action, support for insurgents: case study of the Third Silesian Uprising
by Hubert Królikowski
April 2023, Volume 34, Issue 3
- 541-545 Counterinsurgency in China and India: an Introduction
by Peter Lorge - 546-570 Roots of Afridi Insurgency in British India’s North-West Frontier: 1849-1897
by Sameetah Agha - 571-596 Small wars as ‘savage warfare’: rethinking colonial counterinsurgency operations in Northeast India and Northwest Burma (1826–1919)
by Pum Khan Pau - 597-626 Sikh insurgency in pre-British India: origin, context and legacies
by Kaushik Roy - 627-669 Heart-minds and harquebuses: the Bozhou rebellion in China (1587-1600)
by Barend Noordam - 670-692 Blown like cotton in the wind: women’s experiences of the White Lotus War (1796-1804)
by James Bonk - 693-724 The logics of atrocities: a local official and the small wars in Taiping China, 1851–1864
by Weiting Guo - 725-746 Personal allegiances in nineteenth-century China’s southern borderland insurgencies
by Linh D. Vu
February 2023, Volume 34, Issue 2
- () Correction
by The Editors - () Correction
by The Editors - 317-327 The evolution of resistance and counterinsurgency in the South African state, 1899-1948
by Antonio Garcia & Evert Kleynhans - 328-356 A Historical Overview of Boer Guerrilla and British Counterinsurgency Operations During the Anglo-Boer War, 1899-1902
by André Wessels - 357-381 The 1914 South African industrial strike: the first internal deployment of the Union Defence Force
by René Geyer - 382-421 The ovamboland expedition of 1917: the deposing of King Mandume
by Andries M. Fokkens - 422-451 The Union Defence Force and the suppression of the Bondelswarts Rebellion, 1922
by Evert Kleynhans & Antonio Garcia - 452-493 Urban counterinsurgency: the Union Defence Force and the suppression of the 1922 Rand Revolt
by Evert Kleynhans & Anri Delport - 494-519 Enemy within the gates: militarism, sabotage, subversion and counter-subversion in South Africa, 1939-1945
by Fankie Monama - 520-540 Insurgency, counter-insurgency, and the military and security dimensions of South African racial segregation
by Paul B Rich
January 2023, Volume 34, Issue 1
- 1-23 Politicising the rebel governance paradigm. Critical appraisal and expansion of a research agenda
by Hanna Pfeifer & Regine Schwab - 24-51 Rebel governance or governance in rebel territory? Extraction and services in Ndélé, Central African republic
by Tim Glawion & Anne-Clémence Le Noan - 52-80 Council in war: civilocracy, order and local organisation in daraya during the Syrian War
by Tiina Hyyppä - 81-112 ‘Blunt’ biopolitical rebel rule: on weapons and political geography at the edge of the state
by Francesco Buscemi - 113-137 Rebel security governance in transition: the case of post-independence Timor-Leste
by Deniz Kocak - 138-164 Pathways of post-conflict violence in Colombia
by Juan Albarracín & Juan Corredor-Garcia & Juan Pablo Milanese & Inge H. Valencia & Jonas Wolff - 165-194 Dynamics of peace or legacy of rebel governance? Patterns of cooperation between FARC-ex-combatants and conflict-affected communities in Colombia
by Solveig Richter & Laura Camila Barrios Sabogal - 195-220 Thorny identity? Non-state actors, service provision, identities, and Hamas in Gaza
by Abdalhadi Alijla - 221-246 Behind enemy lines: State-insurgent cooperation on rebel governance in Côte d’Ivoire and Sri Lanka
by Sebastian van Baalen & Niels Terpstra - 247-278 The Anglophone crisis in Cameroon: local conflict, global competition, and transnational rebel governance
by Maria Ketzmerick - 279-304 The shadow of ‘the boys:’ rebel governance without territorial control in Assam’s ULFA insurgency
by Alex Waterman - 305-315 Identity, networks, and learning in the study of rebel governance
by Megan A. Stewart - 316-316 Correction
by The Editors
November 2022, Volume 33, Issue 8
- 1259-1284 Dynamic insurgencies and peace nuances in India’s northeast region
by Anns George K G & Sanjay Kumar Jha - 1285-1313 Munathamat Badr, from an armed wing to a ruling actor
by Zana Gulmohamad - 1314-1344 Cyclical jihadist governance: the Islamic State governance cycle in Iraq and Syria
by Matthew Bamber-Zryd - 1345-1371 Understanding the role of digital media in female participation in terrorism: the case of Bangladesh
by Saimum Parvez & Justin V. Hastings - 1372-1397 Decoding the message: understanding soldiers’ mutiny in Nigeria’s counterinsurgency fight
by Patrick Afamefune Ikem & Freedom C. Onuoha & Herbert C. Edeh & Olihe A. Ononogbu & Chukwuemeka Enyiazu - 1398-1420 Party system change and internal security: evidence from India, 2005-2021
by Subhasish Ray - 1421-1443 Transfers of colonial (dis)order: guerrilla warfare and the British military thought after the Great War
by Stanislav Malkin - 1444-1448 Bullets not ballots: success in counterinsurgency warfare
by William N. Holden
October 2022, Volume 33, Issue 7
- 1085-1092 Afghanistan and the COIN conundrum
by Thomas R. Mockaitis - 1093-1129 Counterinsurgency and the rule of law in Afghanistan
by Bryce G. Poole - 1130-1151 US intervention in Afghanistan and the failure of governance
by Phil Williams - 1152-1176 The two surges: Iraq and Afghanistan in comparison
by Lawrence E. Cline - 1177-1202 Contextualising the Taliban redux (2021): is the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan a Pyrrhic Victory for Pakistan?
by Zahid Ullah - 1203-1215 Modern war in an Ancient Land: a counterinsurgency review
by Carter Malkasian - 1216-1235 Tribal mobilisation during the Syrian civil war: the case of al-Baqqer brigade
by Haian Dukhan - 1236-1258 Operation Intradon in the Musandam,1970-1971: what this counterinsurgency operation says about British military operations in the Arabian Gulf
by Athol Yates & Geraint Hughes
August 2022, Volume 33, Issue 6
- 927-953 Foreign fighter experience and impact
by Nicola Mathieson - 954-972 Neither peace nor democracy: the role of siege and population control in the Syrian regime’s coercive counterinsurgency campaign
by Benedetta Berti & Marika Sosnowski - 973-998 Whose proxy war? The competition among Iranian foreign policy elites in Iraq
by Christian Høj Hansen & Troels Burchall Henningsen - 999-1016 Deterrence by insurgents: Hezbollah’s military doctrine and capability vis-à-vis Israel
by Massaab Al-Aloosy - 1017-1031 Critical review of the protection of aircraft defense forces during the conflict in Nagorno Karabah in 2020
by Miroslav Terzić - 1032-1058 Troops or Tanks? Rethinking COIN mechanization and force employment
by Ryan C. Van Wie & Jacob A. Walden - 1059-1084 Evaluating the effect of military intervention on rebel governance in terms of disaggregated human security
by Koki Shigenoi & Wakako Maekawa
July 2022, Volume 33, Issue 4-5
- 553-580 “Global counterinsurgency and the police-military continuum: introduction to the special issue”
by Stuart Schrader - 581-606 Importing the ‘West German model’: transnationalizing counterinsurgency policing in Cold War Costa Rica
by Fabian Bennewitz & Markus-Michael Müller - 607-632 'Public order is the first business of government': The Law Enforcement Assistance Administration and the making of a liberal counterinsurgent police-industrial complex
by Brendan Hornbostel - 633-653 ‘Police fire on rioters’: everyday counterinsurgency in a colonial capital
by Kaden Paulson-Smith - 654-672 FROM CRIME FIGHTING TO COUNTERINSURGENCY: The Transformation of London’s Special Patrol Group in the 1970s
by Julian Go - 673-692 Normalizing counterinsurgency in the United States: first responders as the first line of defense
by Diren Valayden - 693-719 The secret of BlueLeaks: security, police, and the continuum of pacification
by Brendan McQuade & Lorax B. Horne & Zach Wehrwein & Milo Z. Trujillo - 720-741 Counterinsurgency, community participation, and the preventing and countering violent extremism agenda in Kenya
by Elizabeth Mesok - 742-766 Policing insurgency: are more militarized police more effective?
by Erica De Bruin - 767-795 Hollywood and the hourglass war: cinematic images of drug cartels and conflict on the US-Mexican border
by Paul B Rich - 796-818 India’s counterinsurgency knowledge: theorizing global position in wars on terror
by Rhys Machold - 819-845 International involvement in (re-)building police forces: a comparison of US and UN police assistance programs around the world
by Cameron Mailhot & Michael Kriner & Sabrina Karim - 846-867 The multilateral production of global policing: UN peace operations as hubs for protest policing
by Lou Pingeot - 868-901 ‘The only thing is you have to know them first’: protest policing and Malaysia’s BERSIH protests (2011–2016)
by Kia Meng Boon - 902-925 The fungible terrorist: abject whiteness, domestic terrorism, and the multicultural security state
by Andrea Miller & Lisa Bhungalia
April 2022, Volume 33, Issue 3
- 313-349 Non-inclusive ceasefires do not bring peace: findings from Myanmar
by Stein Tønnesson & Min Zaw Oo & Ne Lynn Aung - 350-381 Fighting ISIS in Syria: Operation Euphrates Shield and the lessons learned from the al-Bab Battle
by Ömer Faruk Cantenar & Cyprian Aleksander Kozera - 382-408 The depiction of women in jihadi magazines: a comparative analysis of Islamic State, Al Qaeda, Taliban and Tahrik-e Taliban Pakistan
by Weeda Mehran & Dominika Imiolek & Lucy Smeddle & Jack Springett-Gilling - 409-436 ‘Forever wars’? Patterns of diffusion and consolidation of Jihadism in Africa
by Stig Jarle Hansen - 437-466 Evolving doctrine and modus operandi: violent extremism in Cabo Delgado
by Thomas Heyen-Dubé & Richard Rands - 467-498 Protection or predation? Understanding the behavior of community-created self-defense militias during civil wars
by Mohammed Ibrahim Shire - 499-527 Integration of Iran-backed armed groups into the Iraqi and Syrian armed forces: implications for stability in Iraq and Syria
by Hamidreza Azizi - 528-549 Psychiatric casualties and the British counter-insurgency in Malaya
by Thomas Probert - 550-552 Colonial institutions and civil war: indirect rule and maoist insurgency in India
by C. Christine Fair
February 2022, Volume 33, Issue 1-2
- 1-21 Advancing private security studies: introduction to the special issue
by Eugenio Cusumano & Christopher Kinsey - 22-47 Mercenaries in/and history: the problem of ahistoricism and contextualism in mercenary scholarship
by Malte Riemann - 48-70 Mercenaries and private military corporations in ancient and early medieval South Asia
by Kaushik Roy - 71-91 ‘Useless and dangerous’? Mercenaries in fourteenth century wars
by Matteo C.M. Casiraghi - 92-111 The Social Construction of Mercenaries: German Soldiers in British Service during the Eighteenth Century
by Helene Olsen - 112-129 Mercenaries in the Congo and Biafra, 1960-1970: Africa’s weapon of choice?
by Stephen Rookes & Walter Bruyère-Ostells - 130-151 Private military companies – Russian great power politics on the cheap?
by Åse Gilje Østensen & Tor Bukkvoll - 152-172 The UAE’s ‘dogs of war’: boosting a small state’s regional power projection
by Andreas Krieg - 173-195 China’s private security companies and the protection of Chinese economic interests abroad
by Jingdong Yuan - 196-223 What does gender got to do with it? PMSCs and privatization of security revisited
by Jutta Joachim & Andrea Schneiker - 224-249 Mercenaries at the movies: representations of soldiers of fortune in Mexico and the Congo in American and European cinema
by Paul B Rich - 250-271 Contractors or robots? Future warfare between privatization and automation
by Antonio Calcara - 272-293 The rise of cybersecurity warriors?
by Moritz Weiss