Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T08:13:57.686Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

“Surveillance of the Surveillers”: Regulation of the Private Security Industry in South Africa and Kenya

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2016

Abstract:

The growth of the private security industry on the African continent has resulted in an expanding labor force engaged in surveillance-type activities. This article analyzes various levels of regulation of private security officers as a form of surveillance. Based on qualitative methodology, it compares the numerous regulatory efforts implemented by the state, industry, and companies of the private security industry in Kenya and South Africa and shows that although different, they essentially share the ultimate aim of controlling private security officers, i.e., to implement a means of “surveillance of the surveillers.”

Résumé:

La croissance de l’industrie de la sécurité privée sur le continent africain a donné lieu à une main-d’œuvre en expansion engagée dans des activités de type de surveillance. Cet article analyse les différents niveaux de réglementation des agents de sécurité privés comme forme de surveillance. Basé sur la méthodologie qualitative, il compare les nombreux efforts de réglementation mis en œuvre par l’État, l’industrie et les entreprises de l’industrie de sécurité privée au Kenya et en Afrique du Sud et montre que, bien que différents, ils partagent tous essentiellement le but ultime de contrôler les agents de sécurité privés, à savoir, de mettre en œuvre un moyen de “surveillance des surveillants.”

Type
ASR FORUM ON SURVEILLANCE IN AFRICA: POLITICS, HISTORIES, TECHNIQUES
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abrahamsen, Rita, and Williams, Michael. 2005. Globalization of Private Security Country Report: Kenya. The Department of International Politics, University of Wales, Aberystwyth.Google Scholar
Abrahamsen, Rita, and Williams, Michael. 2011. Security Beyond the State: Private Security in International Politics. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Baker, Bruce. 2010. Security in Post-Conflict Africa: The Role of Nonstate Policing. Boca Ranton, Fla.: CRC Press.Google Scholar
Berg, Julie. 2003. “The Private Security Industry in South Africa: A Review of Applicable Legislation.” South African Journal of Criminal Justice 16: 178–96.Google Scholar
Braithwaite, John. 2000. “The New Regulatory State and the Transformation of Policing.” British Journal of Criminology 40 (2): 222–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brodeur, Jean-Paul. 2010. The Policing Web. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Brogden, Mike, and Shearing, Clifford. 1993. Policing for a New South Africa. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Button, Mark. 2002. Private Policing. Devon, U.K.: Willan Publishing.Google Scholar
Button, Mark. 2007. “Assessing the Regulation of Private Security Across Europe.” European Journal of Criminology 4 (1): 109–28.Google Scholar
Crawford, Adam. 2006. “Networked Governance and the Post-Regulatory State? Steering, Rowing and Anchoring the Provision of Policing and Security.” Theoretical Criminology 10 (4): 449–79.Google Scholar
Crawford, Adam, and Lister, Stuart. 2006. “Additional Security Patrols in Residential Areas: Notes from the Marketplace.” Policing and Society 16 (2): 164–88.Google Scholar
De Waard, Jaap. 1999. “The Private Security Industry in International Perspective.” European Journal on Criminal Policy and Research 7: 143–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diphoorn, Tessa. 2016. Twilight Policing: Private Security and Violence in Urban South Africa. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Florquin, Nicolas. 2011. “A Booming Business: Private Security and Small Arms,” In Small Arms Survey 2011: States of Security. www.smallarmssurvey.org.Google Scholar
Goold, Benjamin, Loader, Ian, and Thumala, Angelica. 2010. “Consuming Security? Tools for a Sociology of Security Consumption.” Theoretical Criminology 14 (1): 330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goold, Benjamin, Loader, Ian, and Thumala, Angelica. 2013. “The Banality of Security: The Curious Case of Surveillance Cameras.” British Journal of Criminology 53 (6): 977–96.Google Scholar
Grant, Evadne. 1989. “Private Policing.” Acta Juridica: 92117.Google Scholar
Haggerty, Kevin D., and Ericson, Richard V.. 2000. “The Surveillant Assemblage.” The British Journal of Sociology 51 (4): 605–22.Google Scholar
Johnston, Les. 2003. “From ‘Pluralisation’ to ‘the Police Extended Family’: Discourses on the Governance of Community Policing in Britain.” International Journal of the Sociology of Law 31 (3): 185204.Google Scholar
Jones, Trevor, and Newburn, Tim, eds. 2006. Plural Policing: A Comparative Perspective. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lippert, Randy. 2009. “Signs of the Surveillant Asssemblage: Privacy Regulation, Urban CCTV, and Governmentality.” Social and Legal Studies 18 (4): 505–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loader, Ian. 2000. “Plural Policing and Democratic Governance.” Social Legal Studies 9 (3): 323–45.Google Scholar
Lyon, David. 2002. “Surveillance Studies: Understanding Visibility, Mobility and the Phenetic Fix.” Surveillance & Society 1 (1): 17.Google Scholar
Lyon, David. 2008. “Surveillance Society.” Talk presented at Festival del Diritto, Piacenza, Italy, September 28. http://www.festivaldeldiritto.it.Google Scholar
Monahan, Torin. 2010. Surveillance in the Time of Insecurity. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Minnaar, Anthony. 2004. Private–Public Partnerships: Private Security, Crime Prevention and Policing in South Africa. Inaugural Lecture, Department of Security Risk Management, School of Criminal Justice, College of Law, University of South Africa, August 31.Google Scholar
Minnaar, Anthony. 2007. “Oversight and Monitoring of Non-State/Private Policing: The Private Security Practitioners in South Africa.” Private Security in Africa: Manifestation, Challenges and Regulation, edited by Gumedze, Sabelo, 127–49. Pretoria: Institute for Security Studies.Google Scholar
Mkutu, Kennedy, and Sabala, Kizito. 2007. “Private Security Companies in Kenya and Dilemmas for Security.” Journal of Contemporary African Studies 25 (3): 391416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ngugi, R., et al. 2004. Security Risk and Private Sector Growth in Kenya: A Survey Report. Nairobi: Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA).Google Scholar
O’Connor, Daniel, et al. 2004. “After the “Quiet Revolution”: The Self-Regulation of Ontario Contract Security Agencies.” Policing and Society 14 (2): 138–57.Google Scholar
O’Connor, Daniel, et al. 2008. “Seeing Private Security Like a State.” Criminology and Criminal Justice 8 (2): 203–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osborne, David, and Gaebler, Ted. 1992. Reinventing Government: How the Entrepreneurial Spirit Is Transforming the Public Sector. Reading, Mass.: Addison Wesley.Google Scholar
Private Security Industry Regulatory Authority (PSIRA). 2014. Annual Report 2013–2014. Pretoria: South Africa.Google Scholar
Rigakos, George S. 2002. The New Parapolice: Risk Markets and Commodified Social Control. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rose, Nikolas, and Miller, Peter. 1992. “Political Power beyond the State: Problematics of Government.” British Journal of Sociology 43 (2): 173205.Google Scholar
Sarre, Rick, and Prenzler, Tim. 1999. “The Regulation of Private Policing: Reviewing Mechanisms of Accountability.” Crime Prevention and Community Safety: An International Journal 1 (3): 1728.Google Scholar
Shearing, Clifford. 2006. “Reflections on the Refusal to Acknowledge Private Governments.” In Democracy, Society and the Governance of Security, edited by Wood, Jennifer and Dupont, Benoît, 1132. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Shearing, Clifford, and Berg, Julie. 2006. “South Africa.” Plural Policing: A Comparative Perspective, edited by Jones, Trevor and Newburn, Tim, 190221. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Singh, Anne-Marie. 2005. “Private Security and Crime Control.” Theoretical Criminology 9 (2): 153–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singh, Anne-Marie. 2008. Policing and Crime Control in Post-Apartheid South Africa. Aldershot, U.K.: Ashgate Publishing Ltd.Google Scholar
Stenning, Philip C. 2000. “Powers and Accountability of Private Police.” European Journal on Criminal Policy and Research 8 (3): 325–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swiss Confederation, Federal Department of Foreign Affairs (FDFA). n.d. “The Montreax Document.” Bern, Switzerland: FDFA.Google Scholar
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). 2013. 2011 Global Study on Homicide. Trends, Contexts, Data. Vienna: UNODC.Google Scholar
Van Steden, Ronald. 2007. Privatizing Policing: Describing and Explaining the Growth of Private Security. Amsterdam: Boom Juridische Uitgevers.Google Scholar
Wairagu, F., Kamenju, J., and Singo, M.. 2004. Private Security in Kenya. Nairobi: Security Research and Information Centre (SRIC).Google Scholar
Wakefield, Alison. 2003. Selling Security: The Private Policing of Public Space. Devon: Willan Publishing.Google Scholar
White, Adam. 2011. “The New Political Economy of Private Security.” Theoretical Criminology 16 (1): 85101.Google Scholar