Abstract
The growth in size, role and authority of private security has triggered a variety of regulatory reactions. These have stimulated a growing academic debate on preferred regulatory models. This paper summarizes the key existing models of regulation. It then provides a critique of the observations of Loader and White (Regul Gov 11(2):166–184, 2017) on the existing models. It critically examines their proposed model and outlines how we believe that private security regulation can be enhanced by setting out ‘three-pillars’ of effective regulation. The literature and research points towards the need for a regulatory pillar that enhances the wider private security sector, a distributive pillar that addresses security inequality and lastly a responsibility pillar designed to align the private security industry with the public interest.
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Stiernstedt, P., Button, M., Prenzler, T., & Sarre, R. (2021). The ‘three-pillars model of regulation’: a fusion of governance models for private security. Security Journal, 34(2), 247–260. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41284-019-00224-3
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