A Comprehensive Framework for Human Security
Author: F Fouinat
Date: 2004
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8 pages
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Security has historically been considered the responsibility of the state, but the evolution of threats has altered this understanding. How should the world now respond? This paper by the Commission on Human Security argues that as threats challenge our collective capacity to respond, there is a case for rebuilding the foundation of our multilateral system and adapting it to the realities of an interdependent world.
As pre-emption has superseded prevention in the military panoply, a similar but more legitimate approach is needed to deal with human insecurities. The Commission on Human Security was set up in January 2001 in response to the UN Secretary General' call at the Millennium Summit for a world "free of want" and "free of fear". It concluded its activities in May 2003. The goals of the Commission were threefold: (1) to provide public understanding, engagement, and support of human security and its underlying imperatives; (2) to develop the concept of human security as an operational tool for policy formulation and implementation and (3) to propose a concrete programme of action to address critical and pervasive threats to human security.
The Commission focused its attention equally on problems linked to conflict and those links to poverty, considering that both are closely related. Additionally, the following principles were key:
To operationalise the concept of human security a social minimum should be seen as a foundation for promoting social justice and social cohesion. Furthermore, human security is the necessary complement of the security of states.
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Source:
Fouinat, F., 2004, ‘A Comprehensive Framework for Human Security’, Conflict, Security and Development, vol. 4, issue 3