Militarised Approaches to Serious and Organised Crime: Approaches and Policy Implications

December 2023

Evidence Review Paper 4

Luke Kelly, (The Humanitarianism and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI), University of Manchester)

Closing ceremony of Operation Potiguar III. Armed Forces troops finished patrolling the city streets to help fight organized crime.

PUBLICATION SUMMARY

This annotated bibliography includes research and evidence on militarised approaches to combating serious and organised crime (SOC) in various contexts. Militarised approaches involve using military forces or methods to deter and disrupt SOC groups. These approaches have been employed in states facing high levels of violence, fragile and conflict-affected contexts, post-conflict settings, and against threats like piracy and wildlife crime.

The research finds that the evidence on the effectiveness of militarised approaches is largely negative. While there are a range of militarised approaches, applied in a variety of contexts, most papers nevertheless agree that military force, or military techniques, can only address one facet of SOC at best, and need to be linked with a range of other measures such as policing, rule of law interventions and economic interventions, to effectively combat SOC. As well as drawing resources away from these other measures, militarised approaches have also been found to have a number of direct and indirect negative effects, such as human rights abuses, increases in violence and undermining the rule of law.


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Coercive Brokerage: The Paramilitary-Organized Crime Nexus in Borderlands and Frontiers Working Paper I

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