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Innere Sicherheit transnational: Bundesdeutsche Polizeihilfe für Lateinamerika in den 1970er- und 1980er-Jahren

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Abstract

Police assistance programmes for Global South countries were a key component of West Germany’s efforts to counter international left-wing terrorism during the 1970s and 1980s. Security technology ›made in Germany‹ and West German policing expertise were considered important foreign policy tools to support the modernisation of partner countries’ police institutions and for strengthening international cooperation in the domain of counterterrorism. Focusing on West German police assistance programmes for Latin America, and primarily based on files of the West German federal ministries involved, we demonstrate that, far from simply reflecting broader security or foreign policy goals, the practical unfolding of these programmes was driven by constant negotiation processes between the various actors. This, in turn, transformed police assistance programmes into a veritable symbolic currency whose accumulation decisively pushed the transnationalisation of West Germany’s internal security. Partnerships between the security institutions of democratic states such as West Germany and military dictatorships such as Brazil, Chile and Peru were standard practice.
Original languageGerman
JournalZeithistorische Forschungen
Volume19
Issue number3
Pages (from-to)457-481
Number of pages25
ISSN1612-6033
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

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