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International security

International security is a term which refers to the measures taken by states and international organizations, such as the United Nations, European Union, and others, to ensure mutual survival and safety. These measures include military action and diplomatic agreements such as treaties and conventions. International and national security are invariably linked. International security is national security or state security in the global arena.

A Ukrainian begins the first cut on a Kh-22 air-to-surface missile during elimination activities at an air base in Ozernoye, Ukraine. The weapon was eliminated under the Cooperative Threat Reduction program implemented by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency. (DTRA photo, March 2004)

By the end of World War II, a new subject of academic study, security studies, focusing on international security emerged. It began as an independent field of study, but was absorbed as a sub-field of international relations.[1] Since it took hold in the 1950s, the study of international security has been at the heart of international relations studies.[2] It covers areas such as security studies, strategic studies, peace studies, and other areas.

The meaning of "security" is often treated as a common sense term that can be understood by "unacknowledged consensus".[3] The content of international security has expanded over the years. Today it covers a variety of interconnected issues in the world that affect survival. It ranges from the traditional or conventional modes of military power, the causes and consequences of war between states, economic strength, to ethnic, religious and ideological conflicts, trade and economic conflicts, energy supplies, science and technology, food, as well as threats to human security and the stability of states from environmental degradation, infectious diseases, climate change and the activities of non-state actors.[4]

While the wide perspective of international security regards everything as a security matter, the traditional approach focuses mainly or exclusively on military concerns.[1]

Concepts of security in the international arena edit

Edward Kolodziej has compared international security to a Tower of Babel[5] and Roland Paris (2004) views it as "in the eye of the beholder".[6] Security has been widely applied to "justify suspending civil liberties, making war, and massively reallocating resources during the last fifty years".[7]

Walter Lippmann (1944) views security as the capability of a country to protect its core values, both in terms that a state need not sacrifice core values in avoiding war and can maintain them by winning war.[8] David Baldwin (1997) argues that pursuing security sometimes requires sacrificing other values, including marginal values and prime values.[7] Richard Ullman (1983) has suggested that a decrease in vulnerability is security.[9]

Arnold Wolfers (1952) argues that "security" is generally a normative term. It is applied by nations "in order to be either expedient—a rational means toward an accepted end—or moral, the best or least evil course of action".[10] In the same way that people are different in sensing and identifying danger and threats, Wolfers argues that different nations also have different expectations of security. Not only is there a difference between forbearance of threats, but different nations also face different levels of threats because of their unique geographical, economic, ecological, and political environment.

Barry Buzan (2000) views the study of international security as more than a study of threats, but also a study of which threats that can be tolerated and which require immediate action.[11] He sees the concept of security as not either power or peace, but something in between.[12]

The concept of an international security actor has extended in all directions since the 1990s, from nations to groups, individuals, international systems, NGOs, and local governments.[13]

Traditional security edit

The traditional security paradigm refers to a realist construct of security in which the referent object of security is the state. The prevalence of this theorem reached a peak during the Cold War. For almost half a century, major world powers entrusted the security of their nation to a balance of power among states. In this sense international stability relied on the premise that if state security is maintained, then the security of citizens will necessarily follow.[14] Traditional security relied on the anarchistic balance of power, a military build-up between the United States and the Soviet Union (the two superpowers), and on the absolute sovereignty of the nation state.[15] States were deemed to be rational entities, national interests and policy driven by the desire for absolute power.[15] Security was seen as protection from invasion; executed during proxy conflicts using technical and military capabilities.

As Cold War tensions receded, it became clear that the security of citizens was threatened by hardships arising from internal state activities as well as external aggressors. Civil wars were increasingly common and compounded existing poverty, disease, hunger, violence and human rights abuses. Traditional security policies had effectively masked these underlying basic human needs in the face of state security. Through neglect of its constituents, nation states had failed in their primary objective.[16]

In the historical debate on how best to achieve national security, writers like Hobbes, Machiavelli, and Rousseau tended to paint a rather pessimistic picture of the implications of state sovereignty. The international system was viewed as a rather brutal arena in which states would seek to achieve their own security at the expense of their neighbors. Inter-state relations were seen as a struggle for power, as states constantly attempted to take advantage of each other. According to this view, permanent peace was unlikely to be achieved. All that states could do was to try to balance the power of other states to prevent any one from achieving overall hegemony. This view was shared by writers such as E.H. Carr and Hans Morgenthau.[17]

More recently, the traditional state-centric notion of security has been challenged by more holistic approaches to security.[18] Among the approaches which seeks to acknowledge and address these basic threats to human safety are paradigms that include cooperative, comprehensive and collective measures, aimed to ensure security for the individual and, as a result, for the state.[citation needed]

Theoretical approaches edit

Realism edit

Classical realism edit

In the field of international relations, realism has long been a dominant theory, from ancient military theories and writings of Chinese and Greek thinkers, Sun Tzu and Thucydides being two of the more notable, to Hobbes, Machiavelli and Rousseau. It is the foundation of contemporary international security studies. The twentieth century classical realism is mainly derived from Edward Hallett Carr's book The Twenty Years' Crisis.[19] The realist views anarchy and the absence of a power to regulate the interactions between states as the distinctive characteristics of international politics. Because of anarchy, or a constant state of antagonism, the international system differs from the domestic system.[20] Realism has a variety of sub-schools whose lines of thought are based on three core assumptions: groupism, egoism, and power-centrism.[21] According to classical realists, bad things happen because the people who make foreign policy are sometimes bad.[22]

Neorealism edit

Beginning in the 1960s, with increasing criticism of realism, Kenneth Waltz tried to revive the traditional realist theory by translating some core realist ideas into a deductive, top-down theoretical framework that eventually came to be called neorealism.[21] Theory of International Politics[23] brought together and clarified many earlier realist ideas about how the features of the overall system of states affects the way states interact:

"Neorealism answers questions: Why the modern states-system has persisted in the face of attempts by certain states at dominance; why war among great powers recurred over centuries; and why states often find cooperation hard. In addition, the book forwarded one more specific theory: that great-power war would tend to be more frequent in multipolarity (an international system shaped by the power of three or more major states) than bipolarity (an international system shaped by two major states, or superpowers)."[24]

The main theories of neorealism are balance of power theory, balance of threat theory, security dilemma theory, offense-defense theory, hegemonic stability theory and power transition theory.

Liberalism edit

Liberalism has a shorter history than realism but has been a prominent theory since World War I. It is a concept with a variety of meanings. Liberal thinking dates back to philosophers such as Thomas Paine and Immanuel Kant, who argued that republican constitutions produce peace. Kant's concept of Perpetual Peace is arguably seen as the starting point of contemporary liberal thought.[25]

Economic liberalism edit

Economic liberalism assumes that economic openness and interdependence between countries makes them more peaceful than countries who are isolated. Eric Gartzke has written that economic freedom is 50 times more effective than democracy in creating peace.[26] Globalization has been important to economic liberalism.

Liberal institutionalism edit

Liberal institutionalism views international institutions as the main factor to avoid conflicts between nations. Liberal institutionalists argue that; although the anarchic system presupposed by realists cannot be made to disappear by institutions; the international environment that is constructed can influence the behavior of states within the system.[27] Varieties of international governmental organizations (IGOs) and international non-governmental organizations (INGOs) are seen as contributors to world peace.

Some believe that these international institutions lead to neotrusteeship, or postmodern imperialism. International institutions lead to an interconnectedness between strong and weak or post-conflict nations. In a situation such as a collapsed, weak-nation without the means of autonomous recovery, international institutions often lead to involvement by a stronger nation to aid in recovery.[28] Because there is no definite international security policy to address weak or post-conflict nations, stronger nations sometimes face "mission-creep," a shift from supplying and aiding nations to an escalation of mission goals, when aiding weaker nations.[29] In addition, there is some debate due to lack of testing that international intervention is not the best institution to aid weak or post-war nations.[30] Possible mission-creep, as well as inefficiencies in international intervention, creates debate as to the effectiveness of international institutions in peacekeeping.

Comparison between realism and liberalism edit

Realist and liberal security systems[31]
Theoretical base Realist (alliance) Liberal (community of law)
Structure of the international system Material; static; anarchic; self-help system Social; dynamic; governance without government
Conceptions of security Basic principles Accumulation of power Integration
Strategies Military deterrence; control of allies Democratization; conflict resolution; rule of Law
Institutional features Functional scope Military realm only Multiple issue areas
Criterion for membership Strategic relevance Democratic system of rule
Internal power structure Reflects distribution of power; most likely hegemonic Symmetrical; high degree of interdependence
Decision-making Will of dominant power prevails Democratically legitimized
Relation of system to its environment Dissociated; perception of threat Serves as an attractive model; open for association

Constructivism edit

Since its founding in the 1980s, constructivism has become an influential approach in international security studies. "It is less a theory of international relations or security, however, than a broader social theory which then informs how we might approach the study of security."[32] Constructivists argue that security is a social construction. They emphasize the importance of social, cultural and historical factors, which leads to different actors construing similar events differently.

Women in international security edit

As stated previously on this page, international and national security are inherently linked. Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been prominent in highlighting the importance of women in national and thus international security. In what has been referred to as "the Hillary Doctrine", she highlights the adversarial relationship between extremism and women's liberation in making the point that with women's freedom comes the liberation of whole societies.[33] As states like Egypt and Pakistan grant more rights to women, further liberation and stability within such countries will inevitably ensue, fostering greater security throughout the international realm.[33] Along the same lines, Secretary of State John Kerry stated that "no country can get ahead if it leaves half of its people behind. This is why the United States believes gender equality is critical to our shared goals of prosperity, stability, and peace, and why investing in women and girls worldwide is critical to advancing US foreign policy".[34] Elevating women to equal standing internationally will help achieve greater peace and security. This can be seen in both developmental and economic factors, as just two examples among many. Built into American foreign policy is the idea that empowering women leads to greater international development due to their increased ability to maintain "the well-being of their families and communities, drive social progress, and stabilize societies."[34] Female empowerment through economic investment, such as supporting their participation in the workforce, allows women to sustain their families and contribute to overall economic growth in their communities.[34] Such principles must be propagated nationally and globally in order to increase the agency of women to achieve the necessary gender equality for international security.

There is much consideration within feminist international relations (IR) surrounding the importance of female presence to international security. The inclusion of women in discussions surrounding international cooperation increases the likelihood of new questions being asked that may not be given consideration in an otherwise masculine-dominated environment. As a renowned theorist within Feminist IR, J. Ann Tickner points out questions that women would likely be more inclined to ask in regards to war and peace. For example, why men have been the predominant actors in combat, how gender hierarchies contribute to the legitimation of war, and the consequences of associating women with peace.[35] In general, the main issue of concern to feminists within IR is why in political, social, and economic realms, femininity remains inferior to masculinity, as they see the effects of this transcendental hierarchy both nationally and internationally.[35] Such considerations contribute significant perspective to the role that women play in maintaining peaceful conditions of international security.

Despite acknowledgment of the importance of recognizing women's role in maintaining international security by Clinton, Kerry, and conceivably many others, the fact remains that women are disproportionately presented as victims, rather than actors or leaders. This can be derived by looking at information and statistics presented in Joni Seager's book The Penguin Atlas of Women in the World. For example, in combat zones, women face heightened risks of sexual assault, and their familial responsibilities are complicated by reduced access to necessary resources.[36] In terms of governmental presence, (to support their role as leaders), women have not yet achieved equal representation in any state, and very few countries have legislative bodies that are more than 25% female.[36] While prominent female politicians are becoming more frequent, "women leaders around the world like those who become presidents or prime ministers or foreign ministers or heads of corporations cannot be seen as tokens that give everyone else in society the change to say we've taken care of our women".[33] This statement by Clinton reiterates the necessity to confront such on-going challenges to female participation, making such issues pertinent to international security.

Prominent thinkers edit

Human security edit

Human security derives from the traditional concept of security from military threats to the safety of people and communities.[37] It is an extension of mere existence (survival) to well-being and dignity of human beings.[37] Human security is an emerging school of thought about the practice of international security. Under The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the Commission on Human Security (CHS), in its final report, Human Security Now defines human security as "…to protect the vital core of all human lives in ways that enhance human freedoms and human fulfillment."[38] Critics of the concept of human security claim that it covers almost everything and that it is too broad to be the focus of research. There have also been criticisms of its challenge to the role of states and their sovereignty.[37] The challenge continues with the debate between responsibility for protection of the international community versus the sovereignty of each state.

Human security offers a critique of and advocates an alternative to the traditional state-based conception of security.[39] Essentially, it argues that the proper referent for security is the individual and that state practices should reflect this rather than primarily focusing on securing borders through unilateral military action. The justification for the human security approach is said to be that the traditional conception of security is no longer appropriate or effective in the highly interconnected and interdependent modern world in which global threats such as poverty, environmental degradation, and terrorism supersede the traditional security threats of interstate attack and warfare.[39] Further, state-interest-based arguments for human security propose that the international system is too interconnected for the state to maintain an isolationist international policy. Therefore, it argues that a state can best maintain its security and the security of its citizens by ensuring the security of others. It is need to be noted that without the traditional security no human security can be assured.

Human security is more aligned with non-traditional threats of international security. Compared to the traditional security issues, human security "has been related more to nation-states than to people."[40] Thus, the emphasis on security transitions from territorial security between states to the individual people's security. The two main components includes freedom from fear and freedom from want.[40] The list of human security threats is broad, but can be narrowed under seven main categories: economic security, food security, health security, environmental security, personal security, community security, and political security.[40] Some examples include human trafficking, disease, environmental and natural disasters, degradation, poverty, and more.

Traditional vs Human Security[15]
Type of security Referent Responsibility Threats
Traditional The state Integrity of the state Interstate war, nuclear proliferation, revolution, civil conflict
Human The individual Integrity of the individual Disease, poverty, natural disaster, violence, landmines, human rights abuses

UNDP human security proposal edit

The 1994 UNDP Human Development Report (HDR)[41] proposes that increasing human security entails:

  • Investing in human development, not in arms;
  • Engaging policy makers to address the emerging peace dividend;
  • Giving the United Nations a clear mandate to promote and sustain development;
  • Enlarging the concept of development cooperation so that it includes all flows, not just aid;
  • Agreeing that 20 percent of national budgets and 20 percent of foreign aid be used for human development; and
  • Establishing an Economic Security Council.

The report elaborates on seven components to human security. Tadjbakhsh and Chenoy list them as follows:

Components of human security as per the HDR 1994 report[42]
Type of security Definition Threats
Economic security An assured basic income Poverty, unemployment, indebtedness, lack of income
Food security Physical and economic access to basic food Hunger, famines and the lack of physical and economic access to basic food
Health security Protection from diseases and unhealthy lifestyles Inadequate health care, new and recurrent diseases including epidemics and pandemics, poor nutrition and unsafe environment, unsafe lifestyles
Environmental security Healthy physical environment Environmental degradation, natural disasters, pollution and resource depletion
Personal security Security from physical violence From the state (torture), other states (war), groups of people (ethnic tension), individuals or gangs (crime), industrial, workplace or traffic accidents
Community security Safe membership in a group From the group (oppressive practices), between groups (ethnic violence), from dominant groups (e.g. indigenous people vulnerability)
Political security Living in a society that honors basic human rights Political or state repression, including torture, disappearance, human rights violations, detention and imprisonment

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Buzan, B. and L. Hansen (2009). The Evolution of International Security Studies. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
  2. ^ Sheehan, M. (2005). International Security: An Analytical Survey. London, Lynne Rienner Publishers.
  3. ^ Sheehan, M. (2005), International Security: and Analytical Survey, London, Lynne Rienner Publishers
  4. ^ Buzen, B., O. Wæver, et al. (1998). Security: A new frame work for Analysis. Boulder, CO, Lynne Rienner Publishers.; Doty, P., A. Carnesale, et al. (1976). "Foreword." International Security 1(1).
  5. ^ Kolodziej, E. (2005). Security and International Relations. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, p.11.
  6. ^ Paris, R. (2004). "Still and Inscrutable Concept", Security Dialogue 35: 370–372.
  7. ^ a b Baldwin, D. (1997). "The Concept of Security." Review of International studies 23: 5–26
  8. ^ Lippmann, W. (1944). U.S. Foreign Policy. London, Hamish Hamilton
  9. ^ Ullman, R. (1983). "Redefining Security." International Security 8(1): 129–153
  10. ^ Wolfers, A. (1952). ""National Security" as an Ambiguous Symbol." Political Science Quarterly 67(4): 481–502.
  11. ^ Buzan, B. (2000). 'Change and Insecurity' reconsidered. Critical Reflection on Security and Change. S. Croft and T. Terriff. Oxen, Frank Cass Publishers.
  12. ^ Buzan, B. (2007). People, States & Fear. Colchester, ECPR.
  13. ^ Rothschild, E. (1995). "What is Security." Dædalus 124(3): 53–98.
  14. ^ Bajpai, K. (2000). (PDF). University of Notre Dame, Kroc Institute Occasional Paper no. 19. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-06-28.
  15. ^ a b c Owen, T. (2004), "Challenges and opportunities for defining and measuring human security", Human Rights, Human Security and Disarmament, Disarmament Forum. 3, 15–24
  16. ^ J. Baylis, (1997). "International Security in the Post-Cold War Era", in John Baylis and Steve Smith (eds), The Globalization of World Politics, Oxford, Oxford University Press.
  17. ^ Baylis, John (2011). The Globalization of World Politics (fifth ed.). New York: Oxford University Press Inc. p. 234. ISBN 978-0-19-956909-0.
  18. ^ Strategy and Ethnic Conflict (ISBN 027597636X) and Path to Peace (ISBN 1590337328) among many others)
  19. ^ Elman, C. (2008). Realism. Security Studies:and Introduction. P. D. William. New York, Routledge.
  20. ^ Morgan, P. (2007). Security in International Politics: Traditional Approaches. Contemporary Security Studies. A. Collins. New York, Oxford University Press.
  21. ^ a b Wohlforth, W. C. (2010). Realism and Security Studies. The Routledge Handbook of Security Studies. M. D. Cavelty and V. Mauer. New York, Routledge.
  22. ^ Elman, C. (2008). Realism. Security Studies: An Introduction. P. D. William. New York, Routledge.
  23. ^ Waltz, K. Z. (1979). Theory of International Politics. New York, Random House.
  24. ^ The Oxford Handbook of International Relations. Oxford University Press. 2008. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-19-921932-2.
  25. ^ Navari, C. (2008). Liberalism. Security Studies: An Introduction. P. D. William. New York, Routledge.;Rousseau, D. L. (2010). Liberalism. The Routledge Handbook of Security Studies. M. D. Cavelty and V. Mauer. New York, Routledge.
  26. ^ Gartzke, E. (2005), 'Economic Freedom and Peace' in Economic Freedom of the World, Annual Report. pp. 29–44
  27. ^ Navari, C. (2008). Liberalism. Security Studies: An Introduction. P. D. William. New York, Routledge.
  28. ^ "Autonomous Recovery and International Intervention in Comparative Perspective – Working Paper 57". Center For Global Development. Retrieved 2017-05-20.
  29. ^ Fearon, James D.; Laitin, David D. (2004). "Neotrusteeship and the Problem of Weak States". International Security. 28 (4): 5–43. doi:10.1162/0162288041588296. S2CID 57559356.
  30. ^ Fortna, Virginia Page (2004). Does Peacekeeping Keep Peace? International Intervention and the Duration of Peace After Civil War. International Studies Quarterly.
  31. ^ Elman, C. (2008). Realism. Security Studies: An Introduction. P. D. William. New York, Routledge. p. 42.
  32. ^ McDonald, M. (2008). Constructivism. Security Studies: an Introduction. P. D. William. New York, Routledge.
  33. ^ a b c Tzemach Lemmon, G. (2013). "The Hillary Doctrine: Women's Rights are a National Security Issue". The Atlantic. Retrieved November 17, 2013.
  34. ^ a b c Tzemach Lemmon, Gayle. . Council on Foreign Relations. Archived from the original on 2013-09-26. Retrieved November 15, 2013.
  35. ^ a b Tickner, J.A. (2006). Feminism meets International Relations: some methodological issues. New York, Cambridge University Press, p. 23–24.
  36. ^ a b Seager, J. (2008). The Penguin Atlas of Women in the World. New York, Penguin Books, p. 100.
  37. ^ a b c Tadjbakhsh, S. and A. Chenoy (2007). Human Security: Concepts and Implications. New York, Routledge.
  38. ^ "Untitled Page" (PDF). www.unocha.org. Retrieved 2019-09-26.
  39. ^ a b Arcudi, G. (2006). "La sécurité entre permanence et changement" (in French), Relations Internationales 125(1): 97–109.
  40. ^ a b c United Nations Development Program. 1994. "Human Development Report."
  41. ^ "Reports | Human Development Reports". Hdr.undp.org. Retrieved 2014-07-18.
  42. ^ Tadjbakhsh, S. and A. Chenoy (2007). Human Security: Concepts and Implications. New York, Routledge. pp. 128–129.

international, security, academic, journal, international, security, journal, term, which, refers, measures, taken, states, international, organizations, such, united, nations, european, union, others, ensure, mutual, survival, safety, these, measures, include. For the academic journal see International Security journal International security is a term which refers to the measures taken by states and international organizations such as the United Nations European Union and others to ensure mutual survival and safety These measures include military action and diplomatic agreements such as treaties and conventions International and national security are invariably linked International security is national security or state security in the global arena A Ukrainian begins the first cut on a Kh 22 air to surface missile during elimination activities at an air base in Ozernoye Ukraine The weapon was eliminated under the Cooperative Threat Reduction program implemented by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency DTRA photo March 2004 By the end of World War II a new subject of academic study security studies focusing on international security emerged It began as an independent field of study but was absorbed as a sub field of international relations 1 Since it took hold in the 1950s the study of international security has been at the heart of international relations studies 2 It covers areas such as security studies strategic studies peace studies and other areas The meaning of security is often treated as a common sense term that can be understood by unacknowledged consensus 3 The content of international security has expanded over the years Today it covers a variety of interconnected issues in the world that affect survival It ranges from the traditional or conventional modes of military power the causes and consequences of war between states economic strength to ethnic religious and ideological conflicts trade and economic conflicts energy supplies science and technology food as well as threats to human security and the stability of states from environmental degradation infectious diseases climate change and the activities of non state actors 4 While the wide perspective of international security regards everything as a security matter the traditional approach focuses mainly or exclusively on military concerns 1 Contents 1 Concepts of security in the international arena 2 Traditional security 2 1 Theoretical approaches 2 1 1 Realism 2 1 1 1 Classical realism 2 1 1 2 Neorealism 2 1 2 Liberalism 2 1 2 1 Economic liberalism 2 1 2 2 Liberal institutionalism 2 1 3 Comparison between realism and liberalism 2 1 4 Constructivism 2 2 Women in international security 2 2 1 Prominent thinkers 3 Human security 3 1 UNDP human security proposal 4 See also 5 ReferencesConcepts of security in the international arena editSee also National security Definitions Edward Kolodziej has compared international security to a Tower of Babel 5 and Roland Paris 2004 views it as in the eye of the beholder 6 Security has been widely applied to justify suspending civil liberties making war and massively reallocating resources during the last fifty years 7 Walter Lippmann 1944 views security as the capability of a country to protect its core values both in terms that a state need not sacrifice core values in avoiding war and can maintain them by winning war 8 David Baldwin 1997 argues that pursuing security sometimes requires sacrificing other values including marginal values and prime values 7 Richard Ullman 1983 has suggested that a decrease in vulnerability is security 9 Arnold Wolfers 1952 argues that security is generally a normative term It is applied by nations in order to be either expedient a rational means toward an accepted end or moral the best or least evil course of action 10 In the same way that people are different in sensing and identifying danger and threats Wolfers argues that different nations also have different expectations of security Not only is there a difference between forbearance of threats but different nations also face different levels of threats because of their unique geographical economic ecological and political environment Barry Buzan 2000 views the study of international security as more than a study of threats but also a study of which threats that can be tolerated and which require immediate action 11 He sees the concept of security as not either power or peace but something in between 12 The concept of an international security actor has extended in all directions since the 1990s from nations to groups individuals international systems NGOs and local governments 13 Traditional security editThe traditional security paradigm refers to a realist construct of security in which the referent object of security is the state The prevalence of this theorem reached a peak during the Cold War For almost half a century major world powers entrusted the security of their nation to a balance of power among states In this sense international stability relied on the premise that if state security is maintained then the security of citizens will necessarily follow 14 Traditional security relied on the anarchistic balance of power a military build up between the United States and the Soviet Union the two superpowers and on the absolute sovereignty of the nation state 15 States were deemed to be rational entities national interests and policy driven by the desire for absolute power 15 Security was seen as protection from invasion executed during proxy conflicts using technical and military capabilities As Cold War tensions receded it became clear that the security of citizens was threatened by hardships arising from internal state activities as well as external aggressors Civil wars were increasingly common and compounded existing poverty disease hunger violence and human rights abuses Traditional security policies had effectively masked these underlying basic human needs in the face of state security Through neglect of its constituents nation states had failed in their primary objective 16 In the historical debate on how best to achieve national security writers like Hobbes Machiavelli and Rousseau tended to paint a rather pessimistic picture of the implications of state sovereignty The international system was viewed as a rather brutal arena in which states would seek to achieve their own security at the expense of their neighbors Inter state relations were seen as a struggle for power as states constantly attempted to take advantage of each other According to this view permanent peace was unlikely to be achieved All that states could do was to try to balance the power of other states to prevent any one from achieving overall hegemony This view was shared by writers such as E H Carr and Hans Morgenthau 17 More recently the traditional state centric notion of security has been challenged by more holistic approaches to security 18 Among the approaches which seeks to acknowledge and address these basic threats to human safety are paradigms that include cooperative comprehensive and collective measures aimed to ensure security for the individual and as a result for the state citation needed Theoretical approaches edit Main article International relations theory Realism edit Classical realism edit Main article Classical realism in international relations theory In the field of international relations realism has long been a dominant theory from ancient military theories and writings of Chinese and Greek thinkers Sun Tzu and Thucydides being two of the more notable to Hobbes Machiavelli and Rousseau It is the foundation of contemporary international security studies The twentieth century classical realism is mainly derived from Edward Hallett Carr s book The Twenty Years Crisis 19 The realist views anarchy and the absence of a power to regulate the interactions between states as the distinctive characteristics of international politics Because of anarchy or a constant state of antagonism the international system differs from the domestic system 20 Realism has a variety of sub schools whose lines of thought are based on three core assumptions groupism egoism and power centrism 21 According to classical realists bad things happen because the people who make foreign policy are sometimes bad 22 Neorealism edit Main article Neorealism international relations Beginning in the 1960s with increasing criticism of realism Kenneth Waltz tried to revive the traditional realist theory by translating some core realist ideas into a deductive top down theoretical framework that eventually came to be called neorealism 21 Theory of International Politics 23 brought together and clarified many earlier realist ideas about how the features of the overall system of states affects the way states interact Neorealism answers questions Why the modern states system has persisted in the face of attempts by certain states at dominance why war among great powers recurred over centuries and why states often find cooperation hard In addition the book forwarded one more specific theory that great power war would tend to be more frequent in multipolarity an international system shaped by the power of three or more major states than bipolarity an international system shaped by two major states or superpowers 24 The main theories of neorealism are balance of power theory balance of threat theory security dilemma theory offense defense theory hegemonic stability theory and power transition theory Liberalism edit Main article Liberalism in international relations theory Liberalism has a shorter history than realism but has been a prominent theory since World War I It is a concept with a variety of meanings Liberal thinking dates back to philosophers such as Thomas Paine and Immanuel Kant who argued that republican constitutions produce peace Kant s concept of Perpetual Peace is arguably seen as the starting point of contemporary liberal thought 25 Economic liberalism edit Economic liberalism assumes that economic openness and interdependence between countries makes them more peaceful than countries who are isolated Eric Gartzke has written that economic freedom is 50 times more effective than democracy in creating peace 26 Globalization has been important to economic liberalism Liberal institutionalism edit Main article Liberal institutionalism Liberal institutionalism views international institutions as the main factor to avoid conflicts between nations Liberal institutionalists argue that although the anarchic system presupposed by realists cannot be made to disappear by institutions the international environment that is constructed can influence the behavior of states within the system 27 Varieties of international governmental organizations IGOs and international non governmental organizations INGOs are seen as contributors to world peace Some believe that these international institutions lead to neotrusteeship or postmodern imperialism International institutions lead to an interconnectedness between strong and weak or post conflict nations In a situation such as a collapsed weak nation without the means of autonomous recovery international institutions often lead to involvement by a stronger nation to aid in recovery 28 Because there is no definite international security policy to address weak or post conflict nations stronger nations sometimes face mission creep a shift from supplying and aiding nations to an escalation of mission goals when aiding weaker nations 29 In addition there is some debate due to lack of testing that international intervention is not the best institution to aid weak or post war nations 30 Possible mission creep as well as inefficiencies in international intervention creates debate as to the effectiveness of international institutions in peacekeeping Comparison between realism and liberalism edit Realist and liberal security systems 31 Theoretical base Realist alliance Liberal community of law Structure of the international system Material static anarchic self help system Social dynamic governance without governmentConceptions of security Basic principles Accumulation of power IntegrationStrategies Military deterrence control of allies Democratization conflict resolution rule of LawInstitutional features Functional scope Military realm only Multiple issue areasCriterion for membership Strategic relevance Democratic system of ruleInternal power structure Reflects distribution of power most likely hegemonic Symmetrical high degree of interdependenceDecision making Will of dominant power prevails Democratically legitimizedRelation of system to its environment Dissociated perception of threat Serves as an attractive model open for associationConstructivism edit Main article Constructivism international relations Since its founding in the 1980s constructivism has become an influential approach in international security studies It is less a theory of international relations or security however than a broader social theory which then informs how we might approach the study of security 32 Constructivists argue that security is a social construction They emphasize the importance of social cultural and historical factors which leads to different actors construing similar events differently Women in international security edit As stated previously on this page international and national security are inherently linked Former U S Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been prominent in highlighting the importance of women in national and thus international security In what has been referred to as the Hillary Doctrine she highlights the adversarial relationship between extremism and women s liberation in making the point that with women s freedom comes the liberation of whole societies 33 As states like Egypt and Pakistan grant more rights to women further liberation and stability within such countries will inevitably ensue fostering greater security throughout the international realm 33 Along the same lines Secretary of State John Kerry stated that no country can get ahead if it leaves half of its people behind This is why the United States believes gender equality is critical to our shared goals of prosperity stability and peace and why investing in women and girls worldwide is critical to advancing US foreign policy 34 Elevating women to equal standing internationally will help achieve greater peace and security This can be seen in both developmental and economic factors as just two examples among many Built into American foreign policy is the idea that empowering women leads to greater international development due to their increased ability to maintain the well being of their families and communities drive social progress and stabilize societies 34 Female empowerment through economic investment such as supporting their participation in the workforce allows women to sustain their families and contribute to overall economic growth in their communities 34 Such principles must be propagated nationally and globally in order to increase the agency of women to achieve the necessary gender equality for international security There is much consideration within feminist international relations IR surrounding the importance of female presence to international security The inclusion of women in discussions surrounding international cooperation increases the likelihood of new questions being asked that may not be given consideration in an otherwise masculine dominated environment As a renowned theorist within Feminist IR J Ann Tickner points out questions that women would likely be more inclined to ask in regards to war and peace For example why men have been the predominant actors in combat how gender hierarchies contribute to the legitimation of war and the consequences of associating women with peace 35 In general the main issue of concern to feminists within IR is why in political social and economic realms femininity remains inferior to masculinity as they see the effects of this transcendental hierarchy both nationally and internationally 35 Such considerations contribute significant perspective to the role that women play in maintaining peaceful conditions of international security Despite acknowledgment of the importance of recognizing women s role in maintaining international security by Clinton Kerry and conceivably many others the fact remains that women are disproportionately presented as victims rather than actors or leaders This can be derived by looking at information and statistics presented in Joni Seager s book The Penguin Atlas of Women in the World For example in combat zones women face heightened risks of sexual assault and their familial responsibilities are complicated by reduced access to necessary resources 36 In terms of governmental presence to support their role as leaders women have not yet achieved equal representation in any state and very few countries have legislative bodies that are more than 25 female 36 While prominent female politicians are becoming more frequent women leaders around the world like those who become presidents or prime ministers or foreign ministers or heads of corporations cannot be seen as tokens that give everyone else in society the change to say we ve taken care of our women 33 This statement by Clinton reiterates the necessity to confront such on going challenges to female participation making such issues pertinent to international security Prominent thinkers edit Robert Axelrod Liberal institutionalism Barry Buzan Copenhagen School Edward Hallett Carr Classical realism Robert Gilpin Neorealism Thomas Hobbes Classical realism Robert Jervis Neorealism Immanuel Kant Kantian liberalism Peter J Katzenstein Constructivism Robert Keohane Liberal institutionalism Machiavelli Classical realism John Mearsheimer Neorealism Hans J Morgenthau Classical realism Joseph Nye Liberal institutionalism Kathryn Sikkink Constructivism Thucydides Classical realism Kenneth Waltz Neorealism Alexander Wendt ConstructivismHuman security editMain article Human security Human security derives from the traditional concept of security from military threats to the safety of people and communities 37 It is an extension of mere existence survival to well being and dignity of human beings 37 Human security is an emerging school of thought about the practice of international security Under The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs OCHA the Commission on Human Security CHS in its final report Human Security Now defines human security as to protect the vital core of all human lives in ways that enhance human freedoms and human fulfillment 38 Critics of the concept of human security claim that it covers almost everything and that it is too broad to be the focus of research There have also been criticisms of its challenge to the role of states and their sovereignty 37 The challenge continues with the debate between responsibility for protection of the international community versus the sovereignty of each state Human security offers a critique of and advocates an alternative to the traditional state based conception of security 39 Essentially it argues that the proper referent for security is the individual and that state practices should reflect this rather than primarily focusing on securing borders through unilateral military action The justification for the human security approach is said to be that the traditional conception of security is no longer appropriate or effective in the highly interconnected and interdependent modern world in which global threats such as poverty environmental degradation and terrorism supersede the traditional security threats of interstate attack and warfare 39 Further state interest based arguments for human security propose that the international system is too interconnected for the state to maintain an isolationist international policy Therefore it argues that a state can best maintain its security and the security of its citizens by ensuring the security of others It is need to be noted that without the traditional security no human security can be assured Human security is more aligned with non traditional threats of international security Compared to the traditional security issues human security has been related more to nation states than to people 40 Thus the emphasis on security transitions from territorial security between states to the individual people s security The two main components includes freedom from fear and freedom from want 40 The list of human security threats is broad but can be narrowed under seven main categories economic security food security health security environmental security personal security community security and political security 40 Some examples include human trafficking disease environmental and natural disasters degradation poverty and more Traditional vs Human Security 15 Type of security Referent Responsibility ThreatsTraditional The state Integrity of the state Interstate war nuclear proliferation revolution civil conflictHuman The individual Integrity of the individual Disease poverty natural disaster violence landmines human rights abusesUNDP human security proposal edit The 1994 UNDP Human Development Report HDR 41 proposes that increasing human security entails Investing in human development not in arms Engaging policy makers to address the emerging peace dividend Giving the United Nations a clear mandate to promote and sustain development Enlarging the concept of development cooperation so that it includes all flows not just aid Agreeing that 20 percent of national budgets and 20 percent of foreign aid be used for human development and Establishing an Economic Security Council The report elaborates on seven components to human security Tadjbakhsh and Chenoy list them as follows Components of human security as per the HDR 1994 report 42 Type of security Definition ThreatsEconomic security An assured basic income Poverty unemployment indebtedness lack of incomeFood security Physical and economic access to basic food Hunger famines and the lack of physical and economic access to basic foodHealth security Protection from diseases and unhealthy lifestyles Inadequate health care new and recurrent diseases including epidemics and pandemics poor nutrition and unsafe environment unsafe lifestylesEnvironmental security Healthy physical environment Environmental degradation natural disasters pollution and resource depletionPersonal security Security from physical violence From the state torture other states war groups of people ethnic tension individuals or gangs crime industrial workplace or traffic accidentsCommunity security Safe membership in a group From the group oppressive practices between groups ethnic violence from dominant groups e g indigenous people vulnerability Political security Living in a society that honors basic human rights Political or state repression including torture disappearance human rights violations detention and imprisonmentSee also editDemocratic peace theory Global catastrophic risk Human security Peace and conflict studies Security studies Territorial peace theory Violent non state actor World peaceReferences edit a b Buzan B and L Hansen 2009 The Evolution of International Security Studies Cambridge Cambridge University Press Sheehan M 2005 International Security An Analytical Survey London Lynne Rienner Publishers Sheehan M 2005 International Security and Analytical Survey London Lynne Rienner Publishers Buzen B O Waever et al 1998 Security A new frame work for Analysis Boulder CO Lynne Rienner Publishers Doty P A Carnesale et al 1976 Foreword International Security 1 1 Kolodziej E 2005 Security and International Relations Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 11 Paris R 2004 Still and Inscrutable Concept Security Dialogue 35 370 372 a b Baldwin D 1997 The Concept of Security Review of International studies 23 5 26 Lippmann W 1944 U S Foreign Policy London Hamish Hamilton Ullman R 1983 Redefining Security International Security 8 1 129 153 Wolfers A 1952 National Security as an Ambiguous Symbol Political Science Quarterly 67 4 481 502 Buzan B 2000 Change and Insecurity reconsidered Critical Reflection on Security and Change S Croft and T Terriff Oxen Frank Cass Publishers Buzan B 2007 People States amp Fear Colchester ECPR Rothschild E 1995 What is Security Daedalus 124 3 53 98 Bajpai K 2000 Human Security Concept and Measurement PDF University of Notre Dame Kroc Institute Occasional Paper no 19 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 06 28 a b c Owen T 2004 Challenges and opportunities for defining and measuring human security Human Rights Human Security and Disarmament Disarmament Forum 3 15 24 J Baylis 1997 International Security in the Post Cold War Era in John Baylis and Steve Smith eds The Globalization of World Politics Oxford Oxford University Press Baylis John 2011 The Globalization of World Politics fifth ed New York Oxford University Press Inc p 234 ISBN 978 0 19 956909 0 Strategy and Ethnic Conflict ISBN 027597636X and Path to Peace ISBN 1590337328 among many others Elman C 2008 Realism Security Studies and Introduction P D William New York Routledge Morgan P 2007 Security in International Politics Traditional Approaches Contemporary Security Studies A Collins New York Oxford University Press a b Wohlforth W C 2010 Realism and Security Studies The Routledge Handbook of Security Studies M D Cavelty and V Mauer New York Routledge Elman C 2008 Realism Security Studies An Introduction P D William New York Routledge Waltz K Z 1979 Theory of International Politics New York Random House The Oxford Handbook of International Relations Oxford University Press 2008 p 137 ISBN 978 0 19 921932 2 Navari C 2008 Liberalism Security Studies An Introduction P D William New York Routledge Rousseau D L 2010 Liberalism The Routledge Handbook of Security Studies M D Cavelty and V Mauer New York Routledge Gartzke E 2005 Economic Freedom and Peace in Economic Freedom of the World Annual Report pp 29 44 Navari C 2008 Liberalism Security Studies An Introduction P D William New York Routledge Autonomous Recovery and International Intervention in Comparative Perspective Working Paper 57 Center For Global Development Retrieved 2017 05 20 Fearon James D Laitin David D 2004 Neotrusteeship and the Problem of Weak States International Security 28 4 5 43 doi 10 1162 0162288041588296 S2CID 57559356 Fortna Virginia Page 2004 Does Peacekeeping Keep Peace International Intervention and the Duration of Peace After Civil War International Studies Quarterly Elman C 2008 Realism Security Studies An Introduction P D William New York Routledge p 42 McDonald M 2008 Constructivism Security Studies an Introduction P D William New York Routledge a b c Tzemach Lemmon G 2013 The Hillary Doctrine Women s Rights are a National Security Issue The Atlantic Retrieved November 17 2013 a b c Tzemach Lemmon Gayle Why Should U S Foreign Policy Include a Focus on Women in International Development Council on Foreign Relations Archived from the original on 2013 09 26 Retrieved November 15 2013 a b Tickner J A 2006 Feminism meets International Relations some methodological issues New York Cambridge University Press p 23 24 a b Seager J 2008 The Penguin Atlas of Women in the World New York Penguin Books p 100 a b c Tadjbakhsh S and A Chenoy 2007 Human Security Concepts and Implications New York Routledge Untitled Page PDF www unocha org Retrieved 2019 09 26 a b Arcudi G 2006 La securite entre permanence et changement in French Relations Internationales 125 1 97 109 a b c United Nations Development Program 1994 Human Development Report Reports Human Development Reports Hdr undp org Retrieved 2014 07 18 Tadjbakhsh S and A Chenoy 2007 Human Security Concepts and Implications New York Routledge pp 128 129 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to International security Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International security amp oldid 1182924843, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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