Chapter 23
By Amitav Acharya
Introduction
What is human security?
Debates about human security
Dimensions of human security
Promoting human security
Conclusion
Reader's Guide
This chapter examines the origins of the
concept of human security, debates surrounding its definition and scope, some
of the threats to human security in the world today, and international efforts
to promote human security. It proceeds in four parts. The section 'What is
human security?' traces the origin and evolution of the concept, and examines
competing definitions offered by scholars and policy-makers. The next section
reviews debates and controversies about human security, especially over the
analytic and policy relevance of the notion, and the broad and
narrow meanings of the concept ('freedom
from fear versus 'freedom from want'). The third section examines some of the
threats to human security today: While the concept of human security
encompasses a wide range of threats, due to lack of space this sectior will
focus on the trends in armed conflicts as well as the interrelationship between
conflict and other nonviolent threats to human security, such as poverty,
disease, and environmental degradation. The final section analyses the
international community's efforts to promote human security, and concludes by
identifying the major challenges to promoting the notion of human security
today.
What is Human security?
Human security is the combination of threats associated
with war, genocide, and the displacement of populations. At a minimum, human
security means
freedom from violence and from the fear of violence.
Introduction
The concept of human security represents a
powerful, but controversial, attempt by sections of the academic and policy
community to redefine and broaden the meaning of security. Traditionally,
security meant protection of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of
states from external military threats. This was the essence of the concept of
national security, which dominated security analysis and policy-making during
the cold war period. In the 1970s and 1980s, academic literature on security,
responding to the Middle East oil crisis and the growing awareness of worldwide
environmental degradation, began to think of security in broader, non-military
terms. Yet the state remained the object of security, or the entity that is to
be protected. The concept of human security challenges the state-centric
notion of security by focusing on the individual as the main referent object
of security. Human
security is about security for the people,
rather than for states or governments. As such, it has generated much debate.
On the one hand, critics wonder whether such an approach would widen the
boundaries of security studies too much, and whether ‘securitizing’ the individual
is the best way to address the challenges facing the international community
from the forces of globalization. On the other hand, advocates of human security
find the concept to be an important step forward in highlighting the dangers to
human safety and survival posed by poverty, disease, environmental stress,
human rights abuses, as well as armed conflict. These disagreements
notwithstanding, the concept of human security captures a growing realization
that, in an era of rapid globalization, security must encompass a broader range
of concerns and challenges than simply defending the state from external
military attack.
What is
human security?
The origin of the concept of human
security can be traced to the publication of the Human Development Report of
1994, issued by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP 1994). The
Report defined the scope of human security to include seven areas:
Economic security—an assured basic income
for individuals, usually from productive and remunerative work, or, in the
last resort, from some publicly financed safety net.
Food security—ensuring that all people at
all times have both physical and economic access to basic food.
Health security—guaranteeing a minimum
protection from diseases and unhealthy lifestyles.
Environmental security—protecting people
from the short- and long-term ravages of nature, man- made threats in nature,
and deterioration of the natural environment.
Personal security—protecting people from
physical violence, whether from the state or external states, from violent
individuals or sub-state factors, from domestic abuse, and from predatory
adults.
Community security—protecting people from
the loss of traditional relationships and values, and from sectarian and ethnic
violence.
Political security—ensuring that people
live in a society that honours their basic human rights, and ensuring the
freedom of individuals and groups from government attempts to exercise control
over ideas and information.
Unlike many other efforts to redefine
security, where political scientists played a major role, human security was
the handiwork of a group of development economists, such as the late Pakistani
economist Mahbub ul Haq, who conceptualized the UNDP’s Human Development Report.
They were increasingly dissatisfied with the orthodox notion of development,
which viewed it as a function of economic growth. Instead, they proposed a
concept of human development that focuses on building human capabilities to
confront and overcome poverty, illiteracy, diseases, discrimination,
restrictions on political freedom, and the threat of violent conflict:
‘Individual freedoms and rights matter a great deal, but people are restricted
in what they can do with that freedom if they are poor, ill, illiterate,
discriminated against, threatened by violent conflict or denied a political
voice’ (UNDP 2005: 18-19).
Closely related to the attempt to create a broader paradigm for development was the growing concern about the negative impact of defence spending on development, or the so-called ‘guns versus butter’ dilemma. As a global study headed by Inga Thorsson of Sweden concluded, ‘the arms race and development are in a competitive relationship’ (Roche 1986: 8). Drawing upon this study, a UN-sponsored International Conference on the Relationship between Disarmament and Development in 1986 in Paris sought ‘to enlarge world understanding that human security demands more resources for development and fewer for arms’.
Closely related to the attempt to create a broader paradigm for development was the growing concern about the negative impact of defence spending on development, or the so-called ‘guns versus butter’ dilemma. As a global study headed by Inga Thorsson of Sweden concluded, ‘the arms race and development are in a competitive relationship’ (Roche 1986: 8). Drawing upon this study, a UN-sponsored International Conference on the Relationship between Disarmament and Development in 1986 in Paris sought ‘to enlarge world understanding that human security demands more resources for development and fewer for arms’.
The move towards human security was also
advanced by the work of several international commissions. They offered a
broader view of security that looked beyond the cold war emphasis on East- West
military competition. Foremost among them was the Report of the Palme
Commission of 1982, which proposed the doctrine of ‘common security’. The
Report stressed that: ‘In the Third World countries, as in all our countries,
security requires economic progress as well as freedom from military fear’
(Palme Commission 1982: xii). In 1987, the Report of the World Commission on
Environment and Development (also known
as the Brundtland Commission) highlighted the linkage between environmental
degradation and conflict: ‘The real source of insecurity encompass
unsustainable development, and its effects can become intertwined with traditional
forms of conflict in a manner that can extend and deepen the latter’
(Brundtland et al. 1987: 230).
Along with attempts to broaden the notion
of security to include non-military threats, there was also growing emphasis on
the individual as the central object of security. The Palme Commission’s notion
of common security became the conceptual basis of the Conference on Security
and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE). The CSCE made East-West security cooperation
conditional on the improvement of the human rights situation in the former
Soviet bloc. The North-South Roundtable on the ‘Economics of Peace’, held in Costa
Rica in 1990, called for a shift from ‘an almost exclusive concern with
military security ... to a broader concern for overall security of individuals
from social violence, economic distress and environmental degradation’ (Jolly
and Ray 2006: 3).
In the post-cold war era, the importance
given to people’s security has grown in salience. One reason for this is the
rising incidence of civil wars and intra-state conflicts involving huge loss of
life, ethnic cleansing, displacement of people within and across borders, and
disease outbreaks. Traditional national security approaches have not been
sufficiently sensitive towards conflicts that arise over cultural, ethnic,
and religious differences, as happened in Eastern Europe, Africa, and Central
Asia in the post-cold war era (Tow and Trood 2000). Another reason is the
spread of democratization and the post-cold war emphasis on human rights and
humanitarian intervention. The latter involves the principle that the
international community is justified in intervening in the internal affairs of
states accused of gross violation of human rights. This has led to the realization
that, while the concept of national security has not been rendered irrelevant,
it no longer sufficiently accounts for the kinds of danger that threaten
societies, states, and the international community. The notion of human
security has also been brought to the fore by the crises induced by
accelerating globalization. For example, the widespread poverty, unemployment,
and social dislocation caused by the Asian financial crisis in 1997 underscored
the vulnerability of people to the effects of economic globalization (Acharya
2004).
Key Points
The concept of human security (see Box 23.1) represents both a vertical
and a horizontal expansion (or deepening and widening) of the traditional
notion of national security, defined as protection of state sovereignty and
territorial integrity from external military threats.
In its broader sense, human security is
distinguished by three elements: (1) its focus on the individual/people as the
referent object of security; (2) its multidimensional nature; (3) its universal
or global scope, applying to states and societies of the North as well as the
South.
The concept of human security has been
influenced by four developments: (1) the rejection of economic growth as the
main indicator of development and the accompanying notion of 'human
development' as empowerment of people; (2) the rising incidence of internal
conflicts; (3) the impact of globalization in spreading transnational dangers
such as terrorism and pandemics; and (4) the post-cold war emphasis on human rights
and humanitarian intervention.
Debates
about human security
Debates over human security fall into two
categories. First, believers and sceptics of the concept disagree over whether
human security is a new or necessary notion and what are the costs and benefits
of adopting it as an intellectual tool or a policy framework. Second, there
have been debates over the scope of the concept, mainly among the believers
themselves.
For critics of human security, the concept
is too broad to be analytically meaningful or useful as a tool of
policy-making. Roland Paris has argued: ‘Existing definitions of human security
tend to be extraordinarily expansive and vague, encompassing everything from
physical security to psychological well-being, which provides policymakers with
little guidance in the prioritization of competing policy goals and academics
little sense of what, exactly, is to be studied’ (Paris 2001: 88).
Another criticism is that such a concept
might cause more harm than good: ‘Speaking loudly about human security
but carrying a Band-Aid only gives false hopes to both the victims of
oppression and the international community’ (Khong 2001: 3). The definition of
human security is seen to be too moralistic compared to the traditional
understanding of security, and hence unattainable and unrealistic (Tow and
Trood 2000: 14).
A third and perhaps most powerful
criticism of human security is that it neglects the role of the state as a
provider of security. Buzan argues that states are a ‘necessary condition for individual
security because without the state it is not clear what other agency is to act
on behalf of individuals’ (Buzan 2001: 589). This criticism has been echoed by
others, especially scholars with a realist orientation.
Advocates of human security have never
totally discounted the importance of the state as a guarantor of human
security. As the Report of the Commission on Human Security acknowledges,
‘Human security complements state security’ (UN Commission on Human Security
2003). Nor do they claim that human and traditional security concerns are
always antithetical. Weak states are often incapable of protecting the safety
and dignity of their citizens. But whether traditional state security and
human security conflict with each other depends very much on the nature of the
regime that presides over the state. In many countries, human security as
security for the people can and does get threatened by the actions of their own
governments. Hence, while the ‘state remains the fundamental purveyor of security
... it often fails to fulfil its security obligations—and at times has even
become a source of threat to its own people’ (Mack 2004: 366). At the very
least, from a human security perspective, the state cannot be regarded as the
sole source of protection for the individuals (Mack 2004).
Another major debate about human security
has occurred over the scope of the concept: whether it should be primarily
about ‘freedom from fear’ or ‘freedom from want’. The former view, initially
articulated by the former Canadian External Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy,
focuses on reducing the human costs of violent conflicts through measures such
as a ban on landmines, using women and children in armed conflict, child
soldiers, child labour, and small-arms proliferation, the formation of an
International Criminal Court, and promulgating human rights and international
humanitarian law (Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade
(Canada) 1999; The Ottawa Citizen, 28 May 1998: A18). From this
perspective, the UN Charter,
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
and thi Geneva Conventions are the ‘core elements’ of the doctrine of human
security. The latter view, advocated b) Japan (Director-General of the Foreign
Ministry ol Japan 2000), is closer to the original UNDP formulation. It
stresses the ability of individuals and societies to be free from a broad range
of non-military threats such as poverty, disease, and environmental degradation
(see Table 23.1).
But the differences between the two
conceptions ol human security can be overstated, since both regard the
individual as the referent object of security, and both acknowledge the role of
globalization and the changing nature of armed conflict in creating new threats
to human security. Moreover, both perspectives stress safety from violence as
a key objective of human security, and both call for a rethinking of state
sovereignty as a necessary part of promoting human security (Hubert 2004: 351).
There is considerable overlap between the two conceptions: ‘[Development ...
[is] a necessary condition for [human] security, just as security is a
necessary condition for [human] development’ (University of British Columbia,
Human Security Center (hereafter Human Security Report) 2005: 155).
Seeking freedom from fear without addressing freedom from want would amount to
addressing symptoms but not the cause. As the following section shows, while
the deaths caused by armed conflicts have declined, other challenges to the
safety and well-being of the individual have remained, and in some cases
escalated.
Table
23.1 Two conceptions of human security
Freedom from want
|
Freedom from fear
|
|
Original proponents
|
Development economists, Mahbub ul Haq,
Amartya Sen
|
Western governments (Canada, Norway)
|
Main stimulus
|
Dissatisfaction
over orthodox growth-oriented development models; 'guns versus butter’
concerns
|
End
of the cold war; rise of complex emergencies, ethnic strife, state failure,
humanitarian intervention
|
Type of threats
|
Non-military and non-traditional
security concerns:
|
Armed conflicts, violence against
|
addressed
|
poverty, environmental degradation,
disease, etc.
|
individuals
|
Main policy goal
|
Promoting
human development, defined as 'building human capabilities-the range of
things that people can do, and what they can be ... The most basic
capabilities for human development are leading a long and healthy life, being
educated and having adequate resources for a decent standard of living...
[and] social and political participation in society'. These capabilities are
undermined by poverty, disease and ill-health, illiteracy, discrimination,
threat of violent conflict, and denial of political and civil liberties.
(UNDP 2005: 18-19)
|
Protecting
people in conflict zones; reducing the human costs of conflict through a ban
on landmines and child soldiers; protecting human rights; developing
peacebuilding mechanisms
|
Key Points
The concept of human security has been
criticized: (1) for being too broad to be analytically meaningful or to serve
as the basis for policy-making; (2) for creating false expectations about
assistance to victims of violence which the international community cannot
deliver; and (3) for ignoring the role of the state in providing security to
the people.
Even among its advocates, differences
exist as to whether human security is about 'freedom from fear' or 'freedom
from want'. The former stresses protecting people from violent conflicts
through measures such as a ban on landmines and child soldiers. For the latter,
human security is a broader notion involving the reduction of threats to the
well-being of people, such as poverty and disease.
Ultimately, however, both sides agree that
human security is about security of individuals rather than of states, and that
protecting people requires going beyond traditional principles of state
sovereignty.
Dimensions
of human security
Controversies surround research on trends
in armed violence—a key indicator of human security. The first Human Security
Report, released in 2005, claimed a 40 per cent drop in armed conflicts (with
at least twenty- five battle-related deaths, where one of the parties was a
state) in the world since 1991, as well as a 98 per cent decline in the average
number of battle deaths per conflict per year (Human Security Report
2005). The report listed several reasons for this, such as rising economic
interdependence (which increases the costs of conflict); growing
democratization (the underlying assumption here being that democracies tend to
be better at peaceful resolution of conflicts); a growing number of international
institutions that can mediate in conflicts; the impact of international norms
against violence, including war crimes and genocide; the end of colonialism;
and the end of the cold war. A specific reason identified by the Report is the
dramatic increase in the UN’s role in areas such as preventive diplomacy and
peacemaking activities, post-conflict peacebuilding, the willingness of the
UN Security Council to use military action to enforce peace agreements, the
deterrent effects of war crime trials by the war crimes tribunals and the
International Criminal Court (ICC), and the greater resort to reconciliation
and addressing the root causes of conflict (Human Security Report 2005:
Part V).
Yet the optimism created by the Report did
not last long. Confirming the observation made by this chapter in the fifth
edition of this book that ‘the decline in armed conflicts around the world is
not necessarily irreversible’, the Human Security Report for 2009-10 found a 25
per cent increase in armed conflicts between 2003 and 2008 (Simon Fraser
University, Human Security Research Group 2011; see also Fig. 23.1). A large
percentage of these conflicts—a quarter of those that started between 2004 and
2008—were related to ‘Islamist political violence’. These increases were partly
due to ‘minor conflicts’ with few casualties. While the ‘war on terror’ played
an important part in the increasing number and deadliness of conflicts, viewed
from a longer-term perspective, the level of conflict in the Islamic world is
lower than two decades earlier. And in terms of casualty levels, the average
annual battle-death toll per conflict was less than 1,000 in the new millennium
(2008), compared to 10,000 in the 1950s. Yet there remains the possibility of
violence associated with the ‘Arab Spring’ and its aftermath, which, although
low for now, could escalate due to the on-going strife in Syria and instability
in transitional societies.
There are horrific costs associated with
these conflicts. Deaths directly or indirectly attributed to the conflict in
the Democratic Republic of Congo (see Case Study 1 in Ch. 12) since 1998 have
surpassed casualties sustained by Britain in the First World War and Second
World War combined. The conflict in Sudan’s Darfur region displaced nearly 2
million people (UNDP 2005: 12). In Iraq, a team of American and Iraqi
epidemiologists estimates that Iraq’s mortality rate has more than doubled
since the US invasion: from 5.5 deaths per 1,000 people in the year before the
invasion to 13.3 deaths per 1,000 people per year in the post-invasion period.
In all, some 655,000 more people have died in Iraq since the invasion in March
2003 than would have died if the invasion had not occurred (Brown 2006: A12).
The share of civilian casualties in armed
conflict has increased since the Second World War. Civilians accounted for 10
per cent of the victims during the First World War and 50 per cent of the
victims during the Second World War. They constitute between 80 and 85 per cent
of the victims of more recent wars. Many of these victims are children, women,
the sick, and the elderly (Gendering Human Security 2001: 18).
Although death tolls from organized campaigns against civilians have declined
in recent years, the number of such campaigns increased by 55 per cent between
1989 and 2005 (University of British Columbia, Human Security Center 2006: 3).
Furthermore, some of the most serious
issues of human security in armed conflicts still need to be overcome, such as
the use of child soldiers and landmines. Child soldiers are involved in 75 per
cent of recent armed conflicts (Human Security Report 2005: 35).
Landmines and unexploded ordnance cause between 15,000 and 20,000 new
casualties each year (United States Campaign to Ban Landmines website 2007).
Despite the justified optimism generated by the Ottawa Treaty (to be discussed
later: see ‘The role of the international community’), some 10 million stockpiled
landmines remained to be destroyed by 2011. And there remain 80 million live
mines undetected (United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs 2012)—someone
steps on a landmine every twenty-eight minutes, and 80 per cent of those killed
or injured by landmines are civilians (Koehler 2007).
Many armed conflicts have indirect
consequences on human life and well-being. Wars are a major source of economic
disruption, disease, and ecological destruction, which in turn undermine human
development and thus create a vicious cycle of conflict and underdevelopment
(see Ch. 20). As the Human Development Report puts it: ‘Conflict
undermines nutrition and public health, destroys education systems, devastates
livelihoods and retards prospects for economic growth’ (UNDP 2005: 12). It
found that out of the fifty- two countries that are reversing or stagnating in
their attempts to reduce child mortality, thirty have experienced conflict
since 1990. A British government White Paper on international development
notes:
Violent conflict reverses economic growth, causes hunger, destroys
roads, schools and clinics, and forces people to flee across borders ... Women
and girls are particularly vulnerable because they suffer sexual violence and
exploitation. And violent conflict and insecurity can spill over into
neighbouring countries and provide cover for terrorists or organised criminal
groups. (Department for
International Development 2006: 45)
Wars also damage the environment, as
happened with the US use of Agent Orange defoliant during the Vietnam War or
Saddam Hussein’s burning of Kuwaiti oil wells in the 1990-1 Gulf War, leading
to massive air and land pollution. Similar links can be made between conflict
and the outbreak of disease: ‘[W]ar-exacerbated disease and malnutrition kill
far more people than missiles, bombs and bullets’ (Human Security Report 2005:
7). Disease accounts for most of the 3.9 million people who have died in the
conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo (UNDP 2005: 45).
Just as wars and violent conflict have
indirect consequences in causing economic disruption, ecological damage, and
disease, levels of poverty and environmental degradation contribute to
conflict and hence must be taken into consideration in human security research.
One study shows that a country at US$250 GDP per capita has an average 15 per
cent risk of experiencing a civil war in the next five years, while at a GDP
per capita of $5,000, the risk of civil war is less than 1 per cent (Humphreys
and Varshney 2004: 9; Department for International Development 2005: 8). While
no direct link can be established between
poverty and terrorism, terrorists often
‘exploit poverty and exclusion in order to tap into popular discontent- taking
advantage of fragile states such as Somalia, or undemocratic regimes such as in
Afghanistan in the 1990s, to plan violence’ (UNDP 2005: 47). Orissa in India
(see Case Study 1) offers a clear example of how poverty, deprivation, and lack
of economic opportunity can trigger insurgency and acts of terrorism, suggesting
how freedom from fear and freedom from want are inextricably linked.
Environmental degradation (which is often
linked to poverty) and climate change are another source of conflict
(Homer-Dixon 1991,1994). Analysts have identified competition for scarce
resources as a source of possible conflict between Israel and its Arab
neighbours, India and Pakistan, Turkey and Syria, Egypt and Ethiopia (Rice
2006: 78). The world’s poorer countries, where families often see the need for
more children to compensate for a high infant mortality rate and to raise
their income potential, account for a significant proportion of the growth in
the world’s population, which has doubled between 1950 and 1998 (Rice 2006:
80). Population growth, in turn, contributes to resource scarcity and
environmental stress, often resulting in conflict. For example, South Asia, one
of the poorest and most heavily populated regions of the globe, faces
intensified competition and the possibility of conflict over scarce water
resources. Examples include the Indo-Pakistan dispute over the Wular Barrage,
the Indo-Bangladesh water dispute over the Farakka Barrage, and the Indo- Nepal
dispute over the Mahakali River Treaty (Power and Interest News Report
2006). The potential for political upheaval or war as a consequence of
environmental problems is evident in a host of poor regions around the world,
including North Africa, the sub-Saharan Sahel region of Africa (including
Ethiopia, Sudan, Somalia, Mali, Niger, and Chad), the island nations of the
western Pacific Ocean, the Ganges River basin (principally north-eastern
India and Bangladesh), and some
parts of Central and South America
(Petzold-Bradlev Carius, and Vincze 2001). Darfur illustrates the linkage
between poverty, environmental degradation, conflict. Traditional
inter-communal conflict in Darfu: over scarcity of resources and land
deteriorated as a result of desertification and a shortage of rainfall. In the 1970s and
1980s, droughts in northern parts of Darfur forced its nomadic population to
migrate southwards in search of water and herding grounds, and brought them
into conflict with the local tribes (Environmental Degradation and Conflict in
Darfur 2004).
The issue of climate change has emerged as
a security concern for Western countries, although most tend to view it as a
national security ‘threat multiplier’—i.e. one with a potential to trigger
inter-state war or violence that destabilizes international order (The CNA
Corporation 2007)—rather than as a human security concern, in which people’s
livelihood and well-being are compromised. But climate change can be linked to
people’s human security issues, such as increased poverty, state failure, food
shortages, water crisis, and disease (see Box 23.2), which are authentic human
security issues (International Crisis Group 2012; Matthew 2010; Broder 2009).
Natural disasters can also affect the course of conflicts, either exacerbating
or mitigating them. The December 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami changed the course
of two separatist conflicts: Aceh in Indonesia and Tamil separatism in Sri
Lanka. In Aceh, where the government announced a ceasefire to permit relief
work, improved prospects for reconciliation followed. In contrast, the
conflict in Sri Lanka, where relief supplies did not reach rebel-held
territory, saw an escalation of violence, which resulted in the brutal military
extermination of the Tamil Tigers by the Sri Lankan government, with
considerable civilian casualties.
From the foregoing discussion, we can
establish a conceptual link between the broader and narrower understandings of
human security (see Fig. 23.2 and Fig. 23.3).
Women, conflict, and
human security
The relationship between gender and human
security has multiple dimensions. The UN Inter-Agency Committee on Women and
Gender Equality (1999: 1) notes five aspects: (1) violence against women and girls; (2) gender
inequalities in control over resources; gender inequalities in power and
decision-making; women’s human rights; and (5) women
(and men) as actors, not victims. Recent conflicts have shown women as victims
of rape, torture, and sexual slavery. For example, between 250,000 and 500,000 women
were raped during the 1994
genocide in Rwanda. Such atrocities
against women are now recognized as a crime against humanity (Rehn and Sirleaf 2002: 9).
As with data on trends in armed conflict
and casualties, there is controversy over the extent of rape as a weapon of
conflict. A recent study argues that incidences of extreme sexual violence and
strategic rape are less common than believed and are not increasing (Simon
Fraser University, Human Security Research Group 2012 (Human
Security Report 2012)), while
others believe the figures for rapes in conflict zones like the DRC are often
underestimated (Palermo and Peterman 2011:
925).
War-affected areas often see a sharp
increase in domestic violence directed at women, and a growth in the number of
women trafficked to become forced labourers or sex workers. Women and children
comprise 73 per cent of an average population, but account for 80 per
cent of the refugees in the world today, and perhaps a larger percentage as
internally displaced persons.
Another important aspect of the gender
dimension of human security is the role of women as actors in conflicts. This
involves considering the participation of women in combat. In the Eritrean war
of independence, women made up 25-30
per cent of combatants. A similar
proportion of women were fighting with the now-vanquished Tamil Tigers. Women
play an even larger role in support functions, such as logistics, staff, and
intelligence services, in a conflict. It has been noted that women become
targets of rape and sexual violence because they serve as a social and
cultural symbol. Hence violence against them may be undertaken as a deliberate
strategy by parties to a conflict with a view to undermining the social fabric
of their opponents. Similarly, securing womens participation in combat may be
motivated by a desire among the parties to a conflict to increase the
legitimacy of their cause. It signifies ‘a broad social consensus and
solidarity, both to their own population and to the outside world’ (Gendering
Human Security 2001: 18).
In recent years, there has been a growing
awareness of the need to secure the greater participation of women in
international peace operations. The UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations
noted in a 2000 report:
Womens presence [in peacekeeping missions]
improves access and support for local women; it makes male peacekeepers more
reflective and responsible; and it broadens the repertoire of skills and styles
available within the mission, often with the effect of reducing conflict and
confrontation. Gender mainstreaming is not just fair, it is beneficial.
(Cited in Rehn and Sirleaf2002: 63)
In 2000, the UN Security Council passed a
resolution (Security Council Resolution 1325) mandating a review of the impact
of armed conflict on women and the role of women in peace operations and
conflict resolution. The review was released in 2002, entitled Women, Peace
and Security (UN 2002). In his introduction to the report, UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan noted that ‘women still form a minority of those
who participate in peace and security negotiations, and receive less attention
than men in post-conflict agreements, disarmament and reconstruction (UN 2002:
ix). The number of women police officer; in UN peacekeeping missions around the
world has doubled in the five years up to 2010 (to 833, or 6 per cent of the
total). Recent UN peacekeeping missions, such as in Liberia, offered a window
to the view that women might ‘employ distinctive social skills in a rugged
macho domain’, and can be ‘counted on to bring calm to the streets and the
barracks, acting as public servants instead of invaders’ (New York Times, 5
March 2010).
Key Points
Although
there was a noticeable decline in the number of armed conflicts and battle
deaths caused by conflicts during the 1990s until about 2003, these numbers
have increased since then. In considering these mixed trends, one should take
into account conflict mitigating factors, such as rising economic
interdependence among nations, the end of colonialism and the cold war, and the
growing role of international institutions and the international community in
peace operations, while some of the recent increases in conflicts are linked to
the war on terror, 'Islamist political violence' and non-state sectarian
conflicts.
The world
has experienced horrific acts of violence and genocide in recent decades in
places such as Congo, and new forms of violence may emerge. The growing number
of weak or failing states, such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Burma, Nepal, Bangladesh,
and Pakistan, poses a growing threat to human security.
There is an interactive relationship between armed conflict and non-violent threats to
human security such as poverty and disease. Wars and internal conflicts can
lead to impoverishment, disease outbreaks, and environmental destruction.
Conversely, poverty, inequality, and environmental degradation can lead to
weakening and even collapse of states. Human security research should look not
just at the direct and indirect consequences of conflict, but also at the range
of socio-economic, political, and ecological factors that contribute to
conflict. Such an understanding of human security opens the way for reconciling
the two conceptions of human security as freedom from fear and freedom from
want.
Women feature in armed conflicts both as victims and actors (in combat and support
roles). Rape and other forms of sexual violence against them increasingly
feature as an instrument of war, and are now recognized as crimes against humanity.
The international community is seeking ways to increase the participation of
women in UN peace operations and conflict-resolution functions.
Promoting
human security
The role of the
international community
Because of the broad and contested nature
of the idea of human security, it is difficult to evaluate policies
undertaken by the international community
that can be specifically regarded as human security measures. But the most
important multilateral actions include the establishment of several War Crimes
Tribunals, the International Criminal Court (ICC), and the Anti- Personnel
Landmines Treaty. The ICC was established on 1 July 2002 with its headquarters
in The Hague, the Netherlands, although its proceedings may take place
anywhere. It is a permanent institution with ‘the power to exercise its
jurisdiction over persons for the most serious crimes of international concern’
(Rome Statute, Article 1). These crimes include genocide, crimes against
humanity, war crimes, and the crime of aggression, although the Court would not
exercise its jurisdiction over the crime of aggression until the state parties
have agreed on a definition of the crime and set out the conditions under which
it might be prosecuted. The ICC is a ‘court of last resort’. It is ‘complementary
to national criminal jurisdictions’, meaning that it can exercise its
jurisdiction only when national courts are unwilling or unable to investigate
or prosecute such crimes (Rome Statute, Article 1). Human security mechanisms
such as the ICC and War Crimes Tribunals have been involved in the indictment
and prosecution of some high-profile war criminals in the former Yugoslavia,
Liberia, and Congo, including the former President of Yugoslavia, Slobodan
Milosevic (whose trial ended without a verdict after he was found dead in his
cell in March 2006), former Liberian President Charles Taylor, and the former
President of Ivory Coast Laurent Gbagbo and his wife.
The Convention on the Prohibition of the
Use, Stockpiling, Production, and Transfer of Anti- Personnel Mines and on
their Destruction, signed in Ottawa on 3-4 December 1997, bans the development,
production, acquisition, stockpiling, transfer, and use of anti-personnel mines
(Ottawa Treaty, Article 1, General Obligations, 1997). It also obliges
signatories to destroy existing stockpiles. Among the countries that have yet
to sign the treaty are the People’s Republic of China, the Russian Federation,
and the USA.
The surge in UN peacekeeping and
peacebuilding operations has contributed to the decline in conflict and
enhanced prospects for human security. Since 1948, the UN has undertaken 67
peacekeeping operations. And over 117,000 personal were serving on the sixteen
UN-led peace operations on four continents as of 30 November 2013 (United Nations
Peacekeeping website n.d.). More recently, a UN Peacebuilding Commission was
inaugurated in 2006. Its goal is to assist in post-conflict recovery and
reconstruction, including institution-building and sustainable development, in
countries emerging from conflict. The UN has also been centre stage in
promoting the idea of
humanitarian intervention, a central
policy element of human security (see Ch. 24; see also International Commission
on Intervention and State Sovereignty. The concept of humanitarian intervention
was endorsed by the report of the UN High-Level Panel on Threats, Challenges
and Change, A More Secure World (2004: 66, 106), the subsequent report
by the Secretary- General, entitled In Larger Freedom (UN 2005), and
finally by the UN Summit in September 2005.
UN Specialized Agencies play a crucial
role in promoting human security. For example, the UN Development Programme and
the World Health Organization (WHO) have been at the forefront of fighting
poverty and disease respectively. Other UN agencies, such as the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), and the UN
Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), have played a central role in getting
particular issues, such as refugees and the rights of children and women, onto
the agenda for discussion, and in providing a platform for advocacy and action
(MacFarlane and Khong 2006).
Non-governmental organizations contribute
to human security in a number of ways: as a source of information and early
warning about conflicts, providing a channel for relief operations, often
being the first to do so in areas of conflict or natural disaster, and
supporting government- or UN-sponsored peacebuilding and rehabilitation
missions. NGOs also play a central role in promoting sustainable development. A
leading NGO with a human security mission is the International Committee of the
Red Cross (ICRC). Established in Geneva, it has a unique authority based on the
international humanitarian law of the Geneva Conventions to protect the lives
and dignity of victims of war and internal violence, including the war-wounded,
prisoners, refugees, civilians, and other non-combatants, and to provide them
with assistance. Other NGOs include Medecins Sans Frontieres (emergency medical
assistance), Save the Children (protection of children), and Amnesty
International (human rights).
Challenges to human
security promotion
Yet, whether viewed as freedom from fear
or freedom from want, the concept of human security has not replaced national
security. The Human Development Report of 2005 estimates that the rich
nations of the world provide $10 to their military budgets for every $1 they
spend on aid. Moreover, the current global spending on HIV/AIDS, ‘a disease
that claims 3 million lives a year, represents three days’ worth of military
spending’ (UNDP 2005: 8).
Why the continued importance of
national/state security over human security? For developing countries, state
sovereignty and territorial integrity take precedence over security of the
individual. Many countries in the developing world are artificial nationstates,
whose boundaries were drawn arbitrarily by the colonial powers without regard
for the actual ethnic composition or historical linkages between peoples. State
responses to ethnic separatist movements (now conflated with terrorism), which
are partly rooted in people’s rejection of colonial-imposed boundaries, have
been accompanied by the most egregious violations of human security by
governments. Moreover, many Third World states, as well as China, remain under
authoritarian rule. Human security is stymied by the lack of political space
for alternatives to state ideologies and restrictions on civil liberties
imposed by authoritarian regimes to ensure their own survival, rather than
providing security for their citizens.
In the developed as well as the developing
world, one of the most powerful challenges to human security has come from the
war on terror (renamed by the Obama administration as ‘overseas contingency
operation’) led by the USA in response to the 9/11 attacks. These have revived
the traditional emphasis of states on national security (Suhrke 2004: 365).
Although terrorists target innocent civilians and thus threaten human security,
governments have used the war on terror to impose restrictions on, and commit
violations of, civil liberties. The George W. Bush administration’s questioning
of the applicability of the Geneva Conventions, the abandoning of its commitments
on the issue of torture in the context of war in Iraq, and Russia’s flouting of
a wide range of its international commitments (including the laws of war, CSCE
(Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe) and OCSE (Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe) commitments, as well as international and
regional conventions on torture) in the context of its war in Chechnya have
further undermined the agenda of human security.
Key Points
The most important multilateral actions to
date to promote human security include the International Criminal Court and the
Anti-Personnel Landmines Treaty.
UN agencies such as the UNHCR, UNICEF, and
UNIFEM have been crucial in addressing human security issues such as refugees
and the rights of children.
Canada and Japan are two of the leading
countries that have made human security a major part of their foreign policy
agenda. Their approaches, however, show the contrast between the 'freedom from
fear' and 'freedom from want' conceptions of human security respectively.
Non-governmental organizations promote
human security by acting as a source of information and early warning about
conflicts, providing a channel for relief
operations, supporting government or UN-sponsored peacebuilding and
rehabilitation missions, and promoting sustainable development.
The 9/11 attacks on the USA and the 'war
on terror' have revived the traditional state-centric approach to national
security at the expense of civil liberties and human security, although the
Obama administration has modified important elements of its predecessor's
strategic approach to terrorism and promised greater respect for civil
liberties and international conventions.
Conclusion
The concept of human security reflects a
number of developments that have incrementally challenged the traditional view
of security as the protection of states from military attack. What initially
began as a rejection of orthodox notions of economic growth in favour of a
broader notion of human development has been reinforced by new security threats
such as genocides in the Balkans and Africa, the Asian financial meltdown of
1997, and the threat of global pandemics. The concept of human security
represents an on-going effort to put the individual at the centre of national
and global security concerns while expanding our understanding of the range of
challenges that can threaten individual safety and wellbeing, to encompass
both armed conflict and social, economic, and ecological forces. To be sure,
human security has a long way to go before being universally accepted as a
conceptual framework or as a policy tool for national governments and the
international community. The linkages between armed conflict, poverty, disease,
and environmental stress are poorly understood and need clarification and
elaboration. Nonetheless, there can be little doubt that threats to human
security, whether understood as freedom from fear or freedom from want, are
real-world challenges which cannot be wished away or dismissed because of a
lack of agreement over the concept and meaning of human security.
Notwithstanding debates about the utility and scope of human security, there is
increasing acceptance that the traditional notion of security, focusing on
state sovereignty, will no longer suffice, and that the international community
must develop new responses to ensure the protection of people from
transnational dangers in an era of globalization. The challenge for the
international community is to find ways of promoting human security as a means
of addressing a growing range of complex transnational dangers that have a much
more destructive impact on the lives of people than conventional military
threats to states.
Case Study 1
Human security in Orissa, India
Major
disparities in human security may exist as much within as between countries. A
good example is Orissa in India.
Orissa
(population: 29.7 million), located on the east coast of India, is (2008-9) the
poorest state of the country. A total of 46.4 per cent of its people live below
the poverty line (less than US$1 per day), compared to 27.5 per cent for the
country as a whole. Life expectancy (2002-6) in Orissa is 59.6 years (the
national average is 64.2), the infant mortality rate is the highest in India at
52 per 1,000 live births (2008, declining from 91 in 2001), and the literacy
rate (2001) is low at 63.8 per cent (female literacy rate 50.5 per cent).
It is a
paradox that Orissa remains so poor despite having an abundance of natural
resources. It accounts for 32.9 per cent of India's iron ore, 50 percent of its
bauxite, 95 per cent of its nickel, 98 percent of its chromite, and 24 percent
of its coal reserves. In 2009, Orissa had forty-five steel projects
representing more than US$45 billion in investment, with another US$10 billion
in new aluminium projects.
Poverty
in Orissa is overwhelmingly a rural phenomenon, with significant regional
differences within the state. Farmers or agricultural labourers constitute
four out of five poor persons in the state. Its heavily forested interior
districts remain extremely poor relative to the coastal areas.
Compared
to other states of India, Orissa has not seen serious sectarian violence.
Economic growth picked up during the past decade to around 10 per cent. But the
interior regions of Orissa, along with the poorer regions of neighbouring
states, have witnessed a Maoist (Naxalite) insurgency, inspired by extreme
poverty, deprivation, and lack of economic opportunity. '[T]he Maoists claim to
represent the dispossessed of Indian society, particularly the indigenous
tribal groups, who suffer some of the country's highest rates of poverty,
illiteracy and infant mortality' (New
York Times, 31 October 2009). Maoists accuse the government of
trying to disrupt their living and deprive them of their land in order to gain
access to natural resources in the areas they inhabit. One large foreign
investment scheme, a 52,000-crore steel project of South Korean multinational
POSCO, faces opposition from local people who fear that it will displace them
and disrupt their natural livelihood.
Human
security in Orissa is also challenged by environmental degradation and
recurring natural disasters, including floods, droughts, and cyclones. From the
early 1970s to 1996, its effective forest cover declined from around 24 to 17
per cent.
The
case of Orissa suggests, first, that human security needs to be studied not
just at the national level, but also at subnational or local levels. Second,
poverty is a major cause of conflict. Third, availability of natural resources
is no guarantee of increased prosperity and stability. In the absence of measures
to ensure human security, they may even enjoy an inverse relationship. (Government of India 2009; UNDP 2004; Government
of Orissa 2007; Lepeska 2008)
Box 23.1
A contested concept
'Human security can be said to have two
main aspects. It means, first, safety from such chronic threats as hunger,
disease and repression. And second, it means protection from sudden and hurtful
disruptions in the patterns of daily life-whether in homes, in jobs or in
communities. Such threats can exist at all levels of national income and
development.'
(UNDP 1994)
'Human security is not a concern with
weapons. It is a concern with human dignity. In the last analysis, it is a
child who did not die, a disease that did not spread, an ethnic tension that
did not explode, a dissident who was not silenced, a human spirit that was not
crushed.' (Mahbub ul Haq 1995)
'For Canada, human security means freedom
from pervasive threats to people's rights, safety or lives... Through its
foreign policy, Canada has chosen to focus its human security agenda on promoting
safety for people by protecting them from threats of violence.'
(Department of
Foreign Affairs and International Trade (Canada) 2000)
'the concept of human security had better
be confined to freedom from fear of man-made physical violence, also referred
to as direct, personal violence. A broader understanding of human security as
freedom from structural violence will undermine the clarity of the notion and
make it difficult to develop priorities and devise effective policy responses.’
(Sverre Lodgaard 2000)
Human security may be defined as the
preservation and protection of the life and dignity of individual human
beings. Japan holds the view, as do many other countries, that human security
can be ensured only when the individual is confident of a life free of fear and
free of want.'
'Human security can no longer be
understood in purely military terms. Rather, it must encompass economic
development, social justice, environmental protection, democratization, disarmament,
and respect for human rights and the rule of law ... Moreover, these pillars
are interrelated; progress in one area generates progress in another.'
(Kofi Annan 2001)
'The objective of human security is to
safeguard the "vital core of all human lives in ways that enhance human
freedoms and human fulfilment".' (UN
Commission on Human Security 2003)
'the lines drawn between "freedom
from fear", "freedom from want", and "freedom to live a
life with dignity", are easily blurred in people's perceptions of human
security, what it means to them and how it is challenged and how it is to be
promoted. This is the finding that we need to bring into our on-going efforts
to reach i common
understanding of human security.' (Acharya,
Speech to UN General Assembly, 2011)
Box 23.2
Key facts about poverty and disease
Those who take a broad definition of human
security look not • only at threats to the survival and safety of the individual
from violent conflict, but also from such non-violent factors as poverty,
disease, environmental degradation, and natural disasters. Below are some of
the key trends in poverty and disease.
Extreme poverty in the world has declined.
The number of people living on less than US$1.25 or less per day (PPP), fell
from 52 per cent of the developing world's population in 1981 to22 percent-1.29
billion people-in 2008. Most progress was made in East Asia and the Pacific,
but even sub-Saharan Africa has seen positive trends recently (World Bank 2010a, 2012fa). The global economic crisis
could pose a threat to this, although so far its impact has been less severe
than anticipated.
Some 10 million children under the age of
five die each year.
And around 30 per cent of all child deaths
under the age of five are due to undernutrition. About 20 million children
worldwide are severely malnourished (WHO 2008).
The world has seen the appearance of at
least thirty new infectious diseases, including avian flu, HIV/AIDS, Severe
Acute Respiratory Syndrome, H5N1 Avian Influenza,
Hepatitis C, and West Nile virus, in the
past three decades.
Twenty diseases previously detected have
re-emerged with new drug-resistant strains (Rice 2006: 79).
In 2011, there were approximately 34.2 million
people living with HIV. But the number of AIDS-related deaths dropped by 19 per
cent globally between 2004 and 2009 due to increased preventive measures and
treatment, made possible in part by increased support from donors. Women now
make up 52 per cent of the HIV adult prevalence globally, and 60 per cent in
sub-Saharan Africa (WHO 2011, 2012a; WHO, UNICEF, UNAIDS 2011).
Next to HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis (TB) is the
second biggest killer in the world due to a single infectious agent. Although
the incidence of TB dropped by 41 per cent between 1990 and 2011, some 8.7
million people became infected, leading to 1.4 million deaths in 2011.
Countries experiencing a major decline in cases include Brazil and China. In
2011, the largest number of new TB cases occurred in Asia, accounting for 60
per cent of new cases globally (WHO 2012c).
Deaths from malaria fell 25 per cent
globally between 2000 and 2010. But in Africa a child still dies every minute
from malaria. Some 216 million cases of malaria (with an uncertainty range of
149 million to 274 million), resulting in an estimated 655,000 deaths in 2010
(with an uncertainty range of 537,000 to 907,000), were reported for 2010 (WHO 2012b).
Questions
What is human security? How is it
different from the concept of national security?
Is redefining the concept of security to
focus on the individual useful for analysis and for policy formulation?
Describe the main difference between the
two conceptions of human security: 'freedom from fear' and 'freedom from want'.
Are the two understandings irreconcilable?
Some studies show that the incidence of
armed conflict in the world is in long-term decline. What are the reasons for
this trend?
How do you link health with human
security?
How are poverty and conflict interconnected?
What are the main areas of progress in the
promotion of human security by the international community?
What are the major challenges to human
security in Orissa, and what lessons do they suggest for the concept and policy
application of human security?
What are the obstacles to human security
promotion by the international community?
Why do we need to give special
consideration to the suffering of women in conflict zones?
Further Reading
Acharya, A. (2001), 'Human Security: East
Versus West' International Journal,
56(3): 442-60. Examines the debate between two conceptions of human security:
'freedom from fear' and 'freedom from want', with particular reference to Asia.
Commission on Human Security (2003), Human Security Now: Protecting and Empowering People
(New York: United Nations). This report, from a commission proposed by japan
and headed by Sadako Ogata of Japan and Amartya Sen of India, offers a broad
conception and overview of human security, its meaning, and the challenges
facing it, and recommends steps to promote human security.
Duffield, M. (2007), Development, Security and Unending War: Governing
the World of Peoples (Cambridge: Polity Press). Traces the liberal
genealogy of human security and cautions that a neo-liberal approach to human
security amounts to empowering the state in the developmental process and
perpetuating conflicts in the Third World.
Haq, M. (1995), Reflections on Human Development (Oxford: Oxford University
Press). This book by the late Pakistani development economist, who played a
pioneering role in the Human Development
Report, outlines his thinking on human development and human
security.
Tajbakhsh, S., and Chenoy, A. M. (2006), Human Security: Concepts And Implications
(London: Routledge). A comprehensive introduction and overview, focusing on the
conceptual debates and seeking to clarify the ambiguities of the concept. A
valuable teaching tool.
United Nations Development Programme
(1995), Human Development Report 1994
(Oxford: Oxford University Press). The original source of the idea of human
security.
Online Resource Centre
Visit the Online Resource Centre that accompanies this book to access more learning
Visit the Online Resource Centre that accompanies this book to access more learning
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