First published 2017
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Andreas Armborst is head of the National Center for Crime Prevention in Germany, a think tank for evidence-based practices in criminal policy and counter-radicalization. In 2015 he was Marie Curie Fellow at the School of Law in Leeds, UK, where he investigated the long-term development of jihadi ideology. Previously he worked in the field of security and terrorism studies at the Max-Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law and the Center for Security and Society in Freiburg, Germany.
Joakim Berndtsson is a senior lecturer at the University of Gothenburgs School of Global Studies. His primary research interests are the privatization of war and security, but also include general security studies, the history of state formation, civilmilitary relations, the transformation of war and UN peacekeeping. Additionally, he is involved in a national research programme on Information Security, funded by the Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency, and works on a project on the public opinion of the Swedish Armed Forces. Recent work has been published in Armed Forces and Society, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Critical Military Studies and the Journal of Ocean Development and International Law. Together with Christopher Kinsey, joakim Berndtsson is also the editor of the Routledge Research Companion to Outsourcing Security (2016).
Melanie Coni-Zimmer is a senior researcher in the department on Private Actors in the Transnational Sphere at the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt (PRIF), Germany. Her research has focused on corporate social/security responsibility in conflict zones, global crime governance as well as corporations and natural resource governance. She has published several German and English monographs, articles and book chapters on the diffusion and effectiveness of corporate social responsibility in the field of security. She has also co-authored a policy report commissioned by the German Corporation for International Cooperation (GIZ, 2013) on Friend or Foe? Developing Partnerships in Natural Resource Governance. A Global Stakeholder Analysis.
Magnus Dau is a research associate at the University of Siegen, Germany. He works in the international collaborative research project Militarization 2.0: Militarizations Social Media Footprint through a Gendered Lens, funded by the Swedish Research Council and directed by Susan jackson (Stockholm), Nick Robinson (Leeds), jutta joachim (Nijmegen) and Andrea Schneiker (Siegen). Previously, he was a research associate and junior lecturer in Chinese politics at the University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany, and, before that, a research associate in comparative politics at the University of Marburg, Germany, where he also earned an MA in political science.
Alexander De Juan is a visiting professorial fellow for International Administration and Conflict Management at the University of Konstanz and a senior research fellow with the German Institute of Global and Area Studies (GIGA) in Hamburg. His current research interests include institutions in intrastate conflicts, the role of religion and ethnicity in civil war as well as external support to state-building in fragile states. Previously, he worked as a sector economist and project manager Peace and Security for the German government-owned development bank KfW. Alexander De juans recent academic work has been published or is forthcoming in the Journal of Peace Research, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Comparative Political Studies, Political Research Quarterly, British Journal of Political Science, Terrorism and Political Violence, Political Geography, Civil Wars and Conflict Management and Peace Science.
Tessa Diphoorn is an anthropologist and assistant professor at the Department of Anthropology at Utrecht University. Previously she worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Human Geography, Planning and International Development Studies at the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands, where she was part of a larger comparative project on security assemblages in Kingston, Nairobi and jerusalem that was funded by a European Research Council (ERC) Starting Grant. Before that, she researched private security in Durban, South Africa, which resulted in a book Twilight Policing: Private Security and Violence in Urban South Africa with the University of California Press. In addition to that, she has published in various journals, such as Policing and Society, the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography and Medical Anthropology. In May 2017, she will start a new research project entitled Policing the police in Kenya: Analysing state authority from within.
Jutta Joachim is professor of International Relations at Radboud Universiteit in Nijmegen, the Netherlands. Her research interests are: non-state actors in international relations, security governance, the Common Foreign and Security Policy of the EU, human rights and gender and international relations. She is the author of Agenda Setting, the UN, and NGOs: Gender Violence and Reproductive Rights (Georgetown University Press, 2007) and co-editor of International Organizations and Implementation: Enforcers, Managers, Authorities and Transnational Activism in the UN and the EU: A Comparative Study (both Routledge, 2008). Her articles have appeared in International Studies Quarterly, the German Journal for International Relations, Security Dialogue, Millennium, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Critical Military Studies, Comparative European Politics