Critical human security studies

From a critical security studies perspective – and non-traditional security studies more broadly – is the concept of human security something which should be taken seriously? Does human security have anything significant to offer security studies? Both human security and critical security studies ch...

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Veröffentlicht in:Review of international studies 2010-01, Vol.36 (1), p.77-94
1. Verfasser: NEWMAN, EDWARD
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description From a critical security studies perspective – and non-traditional security studies more broadly – is the concept of human security something which should be taken seriously? Does human security have anything significant to offer security studies? Both human security and critical security studies challenge the state-centric orthodoxy of conventional international security, based upon military defence of territory against ‘external’ threats. Both also challenge neorealist scholarship, and involve broadening and deepening the security agenda. Yet critical security studies have not engaged substantively with human security as a distinct approach to non-traditional security. This article explores the relationship between human security and critical security studies and considers why human security arguments – which privilege the individual as the referent of security analysis and seek to directly influence policy in this regard – have not made a significant impact in critical security studies. The article suggests a number of ways in which critical and human security studies might engage. In particular, it suggests that human security scholarship must go beyond its (mostly) uncritical conceptual underpinnings if it is to make a lasting impact upon security studies, and this might be envisioned as Critical Human Security Studies (CHSS).
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identifier ISSN: 0260-2105
ispartof Review of international studies, 2010-01, Vol.36 (1), p.77-94
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Armed Forces
Citizen participation
Critical security studies
Critical theory
Defence policy
Development studies
Environmental security
Freedoms
Human development
Human relations
Human rights
Human Security
International politics
International security
Legitimacy
National Security
NGOs
Nongovernmental organizations
Normativity
Policy making
Political debate
Political security
Privilege
Referents
Scholarship
Scholarship funds
Security studies
Sovereignty
State failure
Strategy/security
Threat
title Critical human security studies
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