Human Security Conceptual Overview

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academic, religious, media and other actors. Analysis Threat assessments primarily focus on terrorism, rogue states, and


Policy Brief 2011

Defining
Human
Security
 





 Human
Security
requires
freedom
from
fear,
freedom
from
want
and
freedom
to
live
in
dignity.
 


Human
Security
includes
five
principles.
 1. Human
security
is
people­centered,
focusing
on
the
safety
and
protection
of
individuals,
 communities,
and
their
global
environment.

A
human
security
approach
empowers
local
 people
to
assess
vulnerabilities
and
threats
and
then
identify
and
take
part
in
strategies
to
 build
security
rather
than
imposing
outside
definitions.
Strategies
to
achieve
human
 security
are
successful
in
as
much
as
they
protect
the
quantity
and
quality
of
life.


 2. Human
security
is
comprehensive.
In
practice,
human
security
strategies
range
from
a
 limited
operational
“freedom
from
fear”
to
a
more
encompassing
structural
approach
 including
“freedom
from
want”
and
“freedom
to
live
in
dignity.”

 3. Human
security
is
multi­sectoral,
addressing
a
range
of
interdependent
global
and
local
 threats,
insecurities
and
vulnerabilities
in
security,
development
and
human
rights.

 4. Human
security
is
context­specific.
Local
dimensions
of
global
threats
are
unique
and
 require
context‐specific
assessment
and
planning.
 5. Human
security
is
prevention­oriented.

Conflict
prevention
and
peacebuilding
strategies
 aim
for
sustainable
solutions
to
address
immediate
and
structural
factors
causing
fear,
want
 and
humiliation.
 


Contrasting
Human
Security
&
National
Security
 The
concept
of
human
security
both
contrasts
and
overlaps
with
notions
of
national
security.
 




National
Security
Paradigm


Human
Security
Paradigm



Goal


Securing
territory,
economic
and
 political
interests
of
the
nation
such
 access
to
oil
or
other
resources
or
 promoting
ideologies
such
as
free
 market
capitalism
or
democracy
 Primarily
military



Protecting
the
well‐being
of
individuals
and
 communities
so
that
they
can
live
free
from
fear,
 free
from
want
and
free
to
live
in
dignity.


Actors


Multi‐track
efforts
at
top,
mid,
and
community
 levels
including
government,
civil
society,
business,
 academic,
religious,
media
and
other
actors
 Analysis
 Threat
assessments
primarily
focus

 Threat
assessments
include
weapons
of
mass
 on
terrorism,
rogue
states,
and
 destruction,
terrorism
from
state
and
non‐state
 weapons
of
mass
destruction
(WMD)


 actors,
fragile
states,
poverty,
economic
disparity,
 discrimination
between
groups,
armed
non‐state
 groups,
deadly
diseases,
nuclear
and
biological
 materials,
instability,
environmental
destruction,
a
 Budget

 Security
budget
geared
toward

 Security
budget
requires
investments
in
preventive
 offensive
military
capacity

 efforts
involving
economic
development,
good
 governance,
and
robust,
multi‐track
diplomacy

 Global
 Less
relationship
to
global
security

 Greater
relationship
to
global
security
 Ties

 


The 3P Human Security promotes conflict prevention and peacebuilding as security strategies.www.3Phumansecurity.org

Short
term
Operational
Human
Security:
 Freedom
from
Fear
and
the
Responsibility
to
Protect The
narrow
“operational”
definition
of
human
security
focuses
on
decreasing
violent
threats
to
 individuals
from
both
state
and
non‐state
actors.


 


Goals
 • •



Community
security
refers
to
protecting
people
from
violence
against
ethnic,
religious
and
 cultural
groups,
particularly
minorities.

 Political
security
refers
to
whether
a
state
protects
and
promotes
human
rights.

Many
 states
still
use
political
repression
and
torture
against
their
own
citizens,
restrict
 information
via
the
media,
and
limit
civil
freedoms.



Doctrine
 A
 traditional
 emphasis
 on
 state
 sovereignty
 limited
 international
 action
 when
 a
 government
 used
 repression
 on
 its
 own
 people
 or
 was
 unable
 to
 protect
 its
 citizens
 during
 civil
 violence.
 Most
 violence
happens
within
states,
not
between
states.

Human
security
requires
stability.

But
when
 governments
 serve
 elite
 interests
 at
 the
 exclusion
 of
 their
 citizens
 or
 when
 governments
 repress
 their
 own
 citizens,
 change
 may
 be
 necessary.
 Human
 security
 approaches
 ask,
 “Stabilization
 for
 whom
 and
 for
 what
 purpose?”
 The
 Responsibility
 to
 Protect
 (R2P)
 doctrine
 details
 each
 state’s
 responsibility
 to
 protect
 its
 population
 from
 genocide,
 war
 crimes,
 crimes
 against
 humanity
 and
 ethnic
cleansing
(mass
atrocities).
If
the
State
is
unable
to
protect
its
population,
the
international
 community
has
a
responsibility
to
help
build
state
capacity
for
early‐warning,
mediating
conflicts,
 security
 sector
 reform,
 and
 many
 other
 actions.
 If
 a
 State
 fails
 to
 protect
 its
 citizens
 from
 mass
 atrocities
 or
 commits
 these
 acts
 against
 its
 own
 citizens,
 the
 international
 community
 has
 the
 responsibility
 to
 intervene
 at
 first
 diplomatically
 using
 a
 wide
 array
 of
 peaceful
 measures,
 then
 more
coercively
through
various
forms
of
sanctions,
and
using
force
as
a
last
resort.
 


Methods
 Short‐term
operational
human
security
efforts
can
include:
 • Security
sector
reform
(SSR)
to
ensure
civilian
oversight
of
security
institutions,
security
 policies
consistent
with
human
rights
laws,
and
relationship‐based
models
of
community
policing.
 • Disarmament,
demobilization,
and
reintegration
(DDR)
of
armed
groups
by
using
 grievance
resolution
processes.

 • Policy
advocacy
to
address
underlying
political,
economic,
and
environmental
drivers
of
 violence
and
insecurity;
policy
advocacy
to
promote
funding
and
primacy
of
human
security
goals
 with
a
focus
on
civilian
protection
rather
than
elite
interests.
 
 Long
term
Structural
Human
Security:

Freedom
from
Need
and
Humiliation
 The
broad
“structural”
definition
of
human
security
includes
a
focus
on
addressing
root
causes.
 


Goals
 • • • • 


Economic
security
refers
to
the
need
for
people
to
have
opportunities
to
earn
and
access
a
 basic
income.
Research
links
high
unemployment
with
crime
and
violence.


 Food
security
refers
to
people
having
physical
and
economic
access
to
basic
food.
Research
 suggests
the
distribution
of
food
and
lack
of
income
to
purchase
food
are
the
core
problems.
 Health
security
refers
to
a
minimum
access
to
health
services,
clean
water
and
other
basic
 necessities
to
prevent
infectious
diseases
and
lifestyle‐related
chronic
diseases.


 Environmental
security
refers
to
threats
from
climate
change
such
as
drought,
storms,
 floods,
rising
sea
waters,
and
pollution
that
harm
the
health
of
humans
and
other
life.



Doctrine
 There
are
several
related
policy
prescriptions
aiming
to
measure
and
address
long‐term
human
 security.
These
include
the
Millenium
Development
Goals
(MDGs),
Human
Development
Index
 (HDI)
and
the
Human
Security
Index.
 


Methods
 Structural
human
security
includes
a
wide
range
of
political
and
economics
strategies
to
support
 participatory
governance
and
sustainable
development.
 The 3P Human Security promotes conflict prevention and peacebuilding as security strategies.www.3Phumansecurity.org