Human Security
Human Security
Human Security
a) What role does the concept of 'human security' have to our understanding of
security studies?
The concept of human security does not challenge the relevance of the state-centric
arguments in so far as these concern the protection of the state from external
military violence. However, the concept does show that state-centric realism is not a
sufficient security argument in that it does not adequately address the security of
people within states and therefore does not serve as the dominant understanding.
Feedback:The label human security came into currency in the mid-1990s, the origins
of which are found in earlier human-centric arguments which proposed that people
ought to be secure in their daily lives. The concept now serves several useful
purposes, the most important being to highlight some critical issues, especially
intra-state political violence that are not included in the state-centric paradigm.
However, so far attempts at conceptually reconciling, or converging, the arguments
about the security of the state and people are underdeveloped. From a practical
perspective the concept of human security has been received inconsistently; some
of the policy community adopts both; some of the policy community rejects it; some
of the policy community misuses it to justify policies that have ulterior motives.
b) In what ways has the purpose of human security been conceptually significant?
Human security has put particular emphasis on the nexus between conflict and
development, a concept which is very useful. The significance of the nexus between
development and conflict is not just that it raises ethical issues about human
suffering and inequalities, but that its frequent outcomes, so called state future, has
dire local, regional, and global effects.
From a normative perspective the concept serves to highlight good global norms.
Human security often serves as an umbrella norm. Developing good global norms is
not only important for moral and ethical reasons but also because they serve to
enhance state and international society.
The development of the human security highlights the view that the threats to
humans as well as to state entities are changing and increasing. These changes
have spurred debates about the meaning of security and the arguments for its
broadening and deepening. Like internal violence, these transnational issues have
serious local, regional, and global effects.
Feedback:Concepts are tools and the predominant purpose of the concept is to focus
attention on the serious local, regional and global effects which are precluded from
the state-centric policy agenda. This is not to infer, however, that human security is
incompatible with state-security concerns. Indeed the concept of human security
may even serve to support realpolitik interests. For example, Sukhre suggests that
Canada and Norway were strong advocates of human security not least because the
concept could assist their lobbying efforts during the early 1990s to gain a seat as
non-permanent members of the UN Security Council (2004: 365). Yet, there are
important differences. State-centric security is focused on protecting the state form
external military threats via deterrence and use of force. Infringements on the
principle of sovereignty are a central justification for the use of force. It is usually
said that in state-centric arguments the state is the referent object of security
whereas in human-centric arguments people are the referent object
Human security is the wide label understood to denote a broad understanding of the
need to protect humans and advance their freedoms. Human security is therefore
equated with a broad spectrum of threats and needs and requires further analysis
before it can be termed a school in security.
Feedback:The means is complicated by argument over the role of the state as the
appropriate agents of human security, and indeed form the perspective that the state
constitutes a large part of the problem (a perspective that is synonymous with the
state-centric position.) Human security will be hard to achieve so long as the state
remains the central actor. However, this raises issues about the role of the state as
a means to human security:
1. Not all states or state-centric positions work against human security
The connections between the schools in human security are apparent. The causal
link can be multi-faceted and interrelated. For example threats of poverty, disease
and poor governance are interconnected to causes of political violence. In these
ways the schools are mutually constitutive, the different conceptual approaches
work towards the same analytical links.
Causality can be a circular dynamic, for example not only can poverty and poor
governance cause political violence, it can also work to the opposite end as well:
political violence can cause poverty and bad governance
Because the conceptual framework identifies the problem of violence and the
causes of violence, it provides a sound basis for the policy community. Important
crisis management will require immediate action and crisis prevention. Proper
management requires policies that address the narrow schools focus on violence
and the broad schools focus on development
Realism focuses on external threats to the state and has failed to deliver security to
people inside states which is normatively objectionable and makes the state, the
realist referent object, vulnerable to both external and internal threats.
g) To what extent is realism and/or human security a sufficient argument for the
concept of sovereignty?
Sovereignty is conditional on the extent to which the people are secure. Neglecting
consideration of the contractual nature of sovereignty, realism leaves the impression
that it has reified the state at the expense of the people.
Case studies have demonstrated that the narrow human security agenda has been
adopted in occurrences of human insecurity crisis if it serves their own national
interests. However, policy objectives have resulted in the production of decreasing
internal violence.
j) What are the future prospects of the human security concept to the study of
security and to practitioners in the policy community?
Because human security makes people the referent objects it puts an onus on
explaining why the state is the referent object if it is not a means to people's
security. Human security continues to usefully highlight this disparity and the
understanding of security and the role of sovereignty
(2005: 94) Furthermore, in Iraq security remained the largest concern of its citizens.
These cases serve to highlight that there is a want for human security and states
have a responsibility to provide it.
l) In what ways does the disaggregation of data facilitate our analysis of human
security in the context of globalization?
Human-security analysis places the individual at the centre of analysis rather than
imagined objects such as the 'nation' that may be irrelevant in some cases. The
disaggregation of data allows more sophisticated exploration of the complex and
contradictory impacts of globalization.
National averages and statistics are often unreliable and unrepresentative as data.
Human security offers a scope of analysis that suits the broad and complex subject
of globalization. Analysis through the lens of human security facilitates a holistic
approach that focuses on the human as referent object, thus inviting a consideration
of whatever factors affect the security of human beings.
Feedback:Human security provides a useful starting point for thinking about the
inter-related nature of many current and future global political challenges. It requires
us to investigate and reflect holistically on matters that affect the security of real
people and their communities, and, where appropriate, to make connections in a way
that traditional state-based analysis - whether in terms of the security debate or the
development debate - has failed to do. Thus, it invites a consideration of whatever
factors affect the security of human beings, ranging from state-sponsored
repression, to international hostilities, to the climate, to environmental degradation
or resource depletion, to the unregulated activities of multinationals, to fluctuating
commodity prices, or to capital market volatility. Human security requires an
analysis of the interconnections between these factors, as a necessary step to
addressing the security concerns of human beings
n) What are the potential criticisms of the human-security approach when adopted in
the analysis of globalisation?
Human security analysis confuses the agendas of international security with those of
social security and civil liberties. Securitization of issues surrounding lifestyle
reduces the coherency of the security model, broadening the concept to a point of
reducing its practical utility.
i) In what ways has HIV/AIDS been considered within the 'human security'
framework?
HIV/AIDS is a human security issue; AIDS is a direct threat to human life; and AIDS is
also an indirect human security threat having adverse affects on many economic,
food, health and personnel security issues of the human security agenda,
representing the evolving security dimension of the HIV/AIDS pandemic and the
individual and social impact.
Feedback:If the human security approach is concerned with securing not only the
survival of the state, but also of the survival of human-beings, then HIV/AIDS clearly
amounts to a security issue within this framework of analyses. In quantitative terms.
HIV/AIDS is already amongst the five most frequent causes of deaths worldwide. In
Africa the illness even vies for the position of posing the greatest human security
threat. There HIV/AIDS is not only the leading cause of death; it is also estimated to
cause more than ten times as many deaths as armed conflict. AIDS thus poses a
numerically greater risk to the survival of many Africans than armed conflict.
Qualitatively, moreover, HIV/AIDS also directly and indirectly affects most of the
components of human security identified by the United Nations Development
Program. At the most basic level, HIV/AIDS is a lethal illness that threatens the life
for those who develop AIDS and who do not enjoy access to medicines. As a result,
the average life expectancy in some African countries is likely to drop by as much as
20-30 years over the next decades. By 2010 the life expectancy in many countries
could even be lower than at the beginning of the twentieth century.
j) What have the implications of the human, national, and international security
dimensions of the HIV/AIDS pandemic been on the future of global security studies?
The armed forces will have to address the issue of HIV/AIDS with due consideration
that human beings living with the virus are not the enemy in the quest to address the
illness and consequently should be included, not excluded from the processes.
Feedback:An effective strategy for the security sector with regard to HIV/AIDS would
also incorporate a greater appreciation and support for the wider efforts currently
being made to combat the pandemic, such as making cheaper drugs available
internationally and contributing to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and
Malaria. Such wider efforts are necessary because the root causes of the AIDS
pandemic are located in a much broader set of economic, political and structural
conditions that will have to be reevaluated if any attempt is to be successful. The
security sector would benefit from recognizing the convergence of interests with
regards to addressing the global AIDS pandemic and to broadly support this wider
endeavor. All of the new security challenges that HIV/AIDS is presently giving rise to
be likely to lessen if there is a significant decrease in the AIDS pandemic. Such
wider international efforts to reduce the transmission of HIV will only be successful
in the long run if they also take into account the multiple security dimensions of the
AIDS pandemic