PRIVATE DEFENSE AGENCY
A 'private defense agency' (PDA) is a hypothetical agency that provides defense services voluntarily through the free market. A PDA is not a private contractor of the state and is not subsidised in any way through taxation. It also does not rely on conscription and other intrusive means of support. Proposals for private defense agencies and similar bodies have been made by Anarcho-capitalists and other libertarians. Within economics, discussion of the concept has largely been confined to the Austrian School.
PDAs work in concert with other agencies such as insurance companies and arbitration agencies, and would have a different set of motives than standard statist defense agencies. Their survival depends on the quality of service leading to a wide customer base, rather than the ability to extract funds via the force of law.
Anarcho-capitalists see the state as illegitimate and therefore consider defense as something that individuals should have the ability to provide or decide for themselves. The Mises Institute published a book of essays with the title The Myth of National Defense: Essays on the Theory and History of Security Production. The Mises Review (Vol. 10, No. 1; Spring 2004). A summary is given in a review by David Gordon, [1].
As a private firm offering individually determined defense, the PDA provides an anarcho-capitalist model for how an entirely private defense would work in practice. But many anarcho-capitalists believe that PDAs are not required for private defense - or are less necessary - in a stateless society. Since the greater number of proprietors makes surrender more costly to an aggressor, and since individuals minding their own business pose little threat to neighboring regions, vulnerability to attack is seen as less likely.
National defense is the function from which statists are customarily least willing to part, so the establishment of PDAs as replacements for state or other regional defense mechanisms meets substantial resistance. Anarcho-capitalists consider the privatization and decentralization of defense (as well as of law) as central to the establishment of stateless societies, since such would essentially eliminate the credibility of (and thus popular support for) the state.
Benjamin Tucker[1] and Gustave de Molinari first explicitly proposed for-profit private defense agencies.
1. Tucker, Benjamin, 1890, ''The Relation of the State to the Individual''.
Tucker, Benjamin, ''Liberty and Taxation''.
★ Insurance
★ Polycentric law
★ Private military company
★ The Private Production of Defense by Hans Hermann Hoppe
★ Restitution Transfer and Recoupment
★ anarcho-capitalism: principles of civilization by J.L.Madrigal
★ Stateless Defense
PDAs work in concert with other agencies such as insurance companies and arbitration agencies, and would have a different set of motives than standard statist defense agencies. Their survival depends on the quality of service leading to a wide customer base, rather than the ability to extract funds via the force of law.
Anarcho-capitalists see the state as illegitimate and therefore consider defense as something that individuals should have the ability to provide or decide for themselves. The Mises Institute published a book of essays with the title The Myth of National Defense: Essays on the Theory and History of Security Production. The Mises Review (Vol. 10, No. 1; Spring 2004). A summary is given in a review by David Gordon, [1].
As a private firm offering individually determined defense, the PDA provides an anarcho-capitalist model for how an entirely private defense would work in practice. But many anarcho-capitalists believe that PDAs are not required for private defense - or are less necessary - in a stateless society. Since the greater number of proprietors makes surrender more costly to an aggressor, and since individuals minding their own business pose little threat to neighboring regions, vulnerability to attack is seen as less likely.
National defense is the function from which statists are customarily least willing to part, so the establishment of PDAs as replacements for state or other regional defense mechanisms meets substantial resistance. Anarcho-capitalists consider the privatization and decentralization of defense (as well as of law) as central to the establishment of stateless societies, since such would essentially eliminate the credibility of (and thus popular support for) the state.
| Contents |
| For-profit private defense agencies |
| References |
| See also |
| External links |
For-profit private defense agencies
Benjamin Tucker[1] and Gustave de Molinari first explicitly proposed for-profit private defense agencies.
References
1. Tucker, Benjamin, 1890, ''The Relation of the State to the Individual''.
Tucker, Benjamin, ''Liberty and Taxation''.
See also
★ Insurance
★ Polycentric law
★ Private military company
External links
★ The Private Production of Defense by Hans Hermann Hoppe
★ Restitution Transfer and Recoupment
★ anarcho-capitalism: principles of civilization by J.L.Madrigal
★ Stateless Defense
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves
Featured Companies
| Vacation By V | |
| Golf Holidays International |
Newest Companies
Private defense agency Travel Deals

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español