Crisis & Control, (In)Formal Hybrid Security in Lebanon

This report aims to analyse how formal and informal security providers implement their respective social order agendas through a security “assemblage”. It also aims to inform the debate on refugee protection and security provision in urban settings, in the context of Lebanon’s hybrid security system. The accounts collected illustrate how state security institutions tacitly accept – or even rely on – informal security actors, managing at times to achieve their political and strategic goals through decentralised and/or illegal forms of control. In this vein, local municipalities imposed curfews and street patrols, which, far from being an institutional measure, follow a flexible and unpredictable pattern.
Three localities have been selected for the purpose of this research - namely Aley in Mount Lebanon, Ebrine in North Lebanon, and Shebaa in South Lebanon. The choice of these localities was driven by their different political and social history, their demographic homogeneity or diversity, and their relationship with surrounding regions.
This report was developed within the framework of the Lebanon Support project – “Urban refugee protection in Lebanon’s hybrid security system: a research and action agenda” – in partnership with International Alert and with the support of WOTRO-NWO. Lebanon Support's info-graphic (In)Formal Hybrid Security in Selected Areas in Lebanon is based on this report, so is the policy brief by International Alert Security That Protects: Informing Policy on Local Security Provision in Lebanese Communities Hosting Syrian Refugees.

Publisher: 
The Centre for Social Sciences Research and Action
تاريخ النشر: 
الأربعاء, 20 يوليو 2016
نوع المورد: 
Studies and Reports
حلة: 
Refugees, Safety & Security
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