From Paternalism to Facilitation

Paper by Sabine Mannitz examines the shortcomings of the SSR concept

Security Sector Reform (SSR) is a networked policy approach that links development and security provision. It incorporates a variety of ambitious goals and involves the interaction of heterogenous actors, leading to mixed results and making SSR a subject of contestation.


In the paper „From Paternalism to Facilitation: SSR Shortcomings and the Potential of Social Anthropological Perspectives“, Sabine Mannitz discusses the shortcomings of the established Security Sector Reform (SSR) concept and practice and argues for an overhaul of the ways in which transformations in security spaces are approached. In consideration of the theoretical and practical implications of the quest to involve local actors in SSR, a related research agenda is sketched and a case is made in particular for the inclusion of social anthropological perspectives to foster an empirically grounded evaluation of security governance interactions and transformations in context. This could be relevant to the search for strategies to support longer term facilitation processes and overcome the widespread paternalism in donor-recipient relations.


Link to the paper