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* Private armies and [[militia]]s.
* Private armies and [[militia]]s.
* Militarized preexisting government agencies, such as [[SWAT]] teams and [[National Security Guards|Black Cats]].<ref name=Cato>[http://www.cato.org/pubs/wtpapers/balko_whitepaper_2006.pdf''Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America'' by Radley Balko of the [[Cato Institute]]]</ref>
* Militarized preexisting government agencies, such as [[SWAT]] teams and [[National Security Guards|Black Cats]].<ref name=Cato>[http://www.cato.org/pubs/wtpapers/balko_whitepaper_2006.pdf''Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America'' by Radley Balko of the [[Cato Institute]]]</ref>
* Auxiliary services of regular armed forces, such as the [[United States Coast Guard Auxiliary]] and the adult portion of the [[Civil Air Patrol]].
* Auxiliary services of regular armed forces, such as the [[United States Coast Guard Auxiliary]] and the [[Civil Air Patrol]].
*Youth groups and movements that can be considered 'militarized' to various degrees, the [[Hitler Youth]] movement being perhaps the most notorious example. Modern examples include military cadet movements like the British Army Cadet Force, the [[Royal Canadian Army Cadets]], the American [[Civil Air Patrol]] and the [[United States Naval Sea Cadet Corps]] and [[India]]'s [[National Cadet Corps]].
*Youth groups and movements that can be considered 'militarized' to various degrees, the [[Hitler Youth]] movement being perhaps the most notorious example. Modern examples include military cadet movements like the British Army Cadet Force, the [[Royal Canadian Army Cadets]], the American [[Civil Air Patrol]] and the [[United States Naval Sea Cadet Corps]] and [[India]]'s [[National Cadet Corps]].
==References==
==References==

Revision as of 03:12, 16 February 2008

A soldier of India's elite Assam Rifles stands guard at the India Gate, New Delhi.

Paramilitary designates forces whose function and organization are similar to those of a professional military force, but which are not regarded as having the same status.[1] The term uses the Greek/Latin prefix para- ("beside"), also seen in words such as paramedic.

The term paramilitary is subjective, depending on what is considered similar to a military force, and what status a force is considered to have. The nature of paramilitary forces therefore varies greatly according to the speaker and the context. For instance, in Northern Ireland, paramilitary refers to any illegally armed group with a political purpose, but in Colombia, paramilitary refers specifically to illegally armed groups which are considered right-wing (e.g. AUC), while illegally armed groups considered left-wing, such as FARC, are referred to as guerrillas.[citation needed]

Depending on context, paramilitaries can include:

References

See also