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Vapenhandel : En kontradiktion till EU:s utvecklingspolitik?Ylipää, Josephine January 2013 (has links)
Arms trade is a multi-faced issue, it can increase the state's economic revenue; however also endanger the human security. The European Union's member state United Kingdom is one of the five largest arms traders in the world. The EU promotes human security in its work, especially in the union's development policies. These circumstances address the main question of the study: is there a contradiction between the UK's arms trade and the EU development policies. The objective of this study is to research the stately weapon use in three of the UK's trading partners, and how it could affect the EU development policies. The UK exports arms to Israel, Sudan and Egypt all countries which have misused arms through attacks towards the civilian population. The misuse of arms has prevented the EU to achieve the goals within the development policies though violations of human rights, increased suffering, and decreased human security.
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In security? : Humanitarian organizations' and aid workers' risk-taking in armed conflictsGode, Martin January 2014 (has links)
Denna studie undersöker problematiken kring attacker mot humanitära biståndsarbetare i konfliktområden. Studien ämnar bidra till detta forskningsfält med ett nytt perspektiv rörande risktagande på individuell så väl som organisatorisk nivå. Studien undersöker ifall detta risktagande kan äventyra biståndsarbetarnas säkerhet. Vidare problematiserar studien det dikotomiska tänkandet om huruvida organisationer bör dra sig ut eller stanna kvar i högriskområden. Detta görs genom att diskutera problematiken utifrån begreppet mänsklig säkerhet i relation till det humanitära uppdraget. Informationen samlades in genom att läsa tidigare litteratur, genomföra intervjuer och genom att distribuera ett frågeformulär. Studien finner flera olika orsaker och incitament till högt risktagande och kategoriserar dessa som avsiktligt och oavsiktligt risktagande. Vidare uppmanar studien organisationer att beakta risktagandeperspektivet och att de bör hantera det oavsiktliga risktagandet eftersom det påverkar humanitära biståndsarbetares säkerhet negativt.
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FORMER GIRL SOLDIERS IN COLOMBIA: YOUNG VOICES THAT NEED TO BE HEARDGiraldo Montoya, Viviana 10 April 2014 (has links)
The exclusion of girls is an issue of great concern when studying the impact of war on individuals in any country affected by armed conflicts. Colombia, for instance, is currently facing an armed conflict and dealing with the issue of child soldiers’ recruitment. This country was the research site of the present study whose main focus was the experiences that girls lived before, during and after their lives as soldiers. Drawing on the Human Security and Gender and Development theoretical frameworks, the main goal of this research was to explore how girl soldiers’ experiences shaped their agency. As it will be demonstrated, girls are not passive individuals, but agents of their own development. They want to participate in the healing of their past, as well as in the transformation of their present and their future; therefore their voices should be heard.
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Official views on the environment and security in South Africa, 2007-2012 : a case of securitisation?Stoltz, Abitt January 2015 (has links)
This research study emanates from the inclusion of environmental risks on the global security agenda. Although dating back to the Rio Summit on Environment and Development (UNEP, 1992), this trend gained momentum following the publication of the Fourth Assessment Report of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in February 2007 (IPCC, 2007a). The report warned that the global climate system is changing mainly because of man-made greenhouse gas emissions, exposing, amongst others, Africa as a continent most vulnerable to the impact of climate variability and change. Subsequent to the report, the security implications of climate change were discussed by the United Nations Security Council in April 2007 (UN, 2007a). With these developments as a point of departure, the aim of this exploratory study is to investigate the securitisation of environmental risks, particularly the impact of climate change, in South Africa, with specific reference to official perceptions of (and where applicable, policy responses to) environmental security between 2007 and 2012.
As a literature and documentary case study on South Africa, the research utilises a conceptual framework that broadens and deepens the concept of security to include the environment as a non-traditional (non-military) aspect. In this context, environmental risks are discussed as a challenge to security, considering their contemporary relevance. Environmental security is discussed as an emerging security issue in the context of its global and regional scope; its linkage to and impact on food, water and energy security; and its influence on the political, economic, and social sectors of security. Further, the study indicates that Southern Africa in general, and South Africa in particular, are highly vulnerable to the impact of environmental risks such as climate change; and that such risks indeed exacerbate existing security risks and threats.
Against this backdrop, the South African government’s securitisation (or lack of securitisation) of the environment is described and explored with reference to official views on environmental security. The analysis indicates that the Government securitises environmental risks such as climate change to a limited degree only (in terms of securitising speech and act); and the issue thus does not fall within the ambit of security, but rather that of sustainable development. The Government base their unsecuritised stance on the impact of environmental risks, on the country’s basic natural resources (such as food, water and energy) being overwhelmed by existing growth pressures; and that the Administration’s current priority is inter alia social development issues, such as employment and poverty eradication.
The study concludes with a summary of key findings in response to the stated research problem, and with recommendations concerning the South African government’s response to environmental security. / Dissertation (MSS)--University of Pretoria, 2015. / Political Sciences / Unrestricted
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Dynamics of human security and regional social and economic development: A case study of the Lake Chad basinBadewa, Adeyemi 26 September 2020 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / Transboundary river basins (TRBs), and its array of biodiversity, have created a web of
complex security, socio-economic and political interdependencies among populations,
communities and multiplicity of actors across the world. However, the continuous degradation
of these vital resources, resulting from natural and anthropogenic factors, has serious
implications for global development, peace and security. Indeed, it further threatens regional
resource base, induce livelihoods impairment, scarcities and conflicts over the utilisation and
control of strategic resources, particularly in the Global South. The study explored the causeeffect
analysis of the desiccation of Lake Chad basin and the dreadful Boko Haram crisis within
the prisms of human security and regional development. It reflects on the interconnections
among environmental change, human development, livelihoods, conflicts and the outcomes of
interventions - military and humanitarian in reconstructing human security and regional
development narratives in the Lake Chad Basin.
The research was contextualised within two theoretical frameworks: eco-violence, and the
capability approach. This was conceived to provide an improved understanding of both the
micro (individual or group interactions) and macro (large scale - national and multinational
actors) development processes, the enablers and constraints of human security in the region.
Their implications for regional development, security, sustainability and stabilisation process
are also elucidated. Mixed-method research and a case study design was adopted to specifically
study the Lake Chad impact area, covering 542,829 km2, across the four riparian countries -
Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria. Although, the conventional or active basin of the lake -
an estimated 984,455 km2 area was generally referenced. Purposive sampling was used to select
participants for semi-structured interviews, focused group discussions (FGD) and document
review. A total of 34 key informants, six (6) FGDs and 33 institutional documents (18
intervention and policy documents and 15 official bulletins) were utilised. These enable the
substantiation of primary data with secondary data – qualitative and quantitative (derived from
documents review). A thematic analysis of the causality of resource scarcities, livelihoods, and
conflict relationships in the region was undertaken. This includes an assessment of the regional
development process and the efficacies of security and humanitarian interventions in the Lake Chad Basin.The study revealed that the desiccation of Lake Chad and the destructive Boko Haram crisis
(since 2009) impede development in the region. The lake’s shrinkage (estimated above 90percent from 1963 till date), caused by environmental change and unsustainable human
practices or exploitation of the basin’s resources, have transboundary effects. These and the
humanitarian catastrophes caused by Boko Haram menace have heightened human insecurity,
and threaten communities’ fragility and transborder cooperation in the region. While regional
development processes and intervention have marginal impacts on the population and their
resilience capacities. Indeed, the complexity of the challenges overlaps with inconsistencies in
the region’s development processes and the interventions regime – security and humanitarian
management. Thus, addressing the consequences, while neglecting the root causes of human
security threats in the Lake Chad Basin, further heightens the population’s deprivations amidst
challenges of resource curse, geopolitics and its alteration of regional political economy. The
above underscores the dialectics between human security and regional development.
From these submissions, improved water resources and environmental management; inclusive
development - to address the root causes of insecurity; monitoring and harnessing of national
and regional development priorities; and integrated regional security-development strategy,
against the military-led humanitarian approach, are recommended as critical solutions. These
enhance a rethinking of human security and regional development matrix in the Lake Chad and
other TRBs in the Global South. Therefore, the study highlighted the imperative of mediating
exhaustive discourse on TRBs as Special Economic Zones (SEZ); constructive interactions
between development processes and actors (stakeholders); the use of groundwater as a
palliative; and the intrinsic mobility, multiactivity and multi-functionality of livelihoods in the
Lake Chad Basin. These can be pondered in (future research and policy) discourses to enhance
regional resilience, human security and sustainable development in the Lake Chad Basin.
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"Crisis" in the Four Pillars: A Mixed Methods Discourse Analysis of Human Security and Overdose in BCFraser, James 07 September 2022 (has links)
The crisis of overdose deaths in British Columbia (BC) continues into its seventh year. This thesis applies a human security lens to a mixed methods computer-assisted discourse analysis on a corpus of public-facing documents from drug enforcement organizations in BC, and one from community-run harm reduction organizations in BC. Analysis uses a “What is the Problem Represented to Be”? (WPR) approach to analyze conflicting conceptual logics and answer the question “What human security problems are constructed in Harm Reduction and Enforcement discourses surrounding the crisis of overdose deaths in British Columbia?” Conclusion: Both corpora construct different problematizations. Whereas enforcement discourses emphasize criminality and proximal substance use harms, harm reduction discourses look at enforcement as a structural threat to people who use drugs. / Graduate / 2023-08-17
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Cosmopolitan Peacekeeping and the Globalisation of Security.Woodhouse, Thomas, Ramsbotham, Oliver Peter January 2005 (has links)
No / UN peacekeeping is once again undergoing a period of intense critical scrutiny. Having passed through three major phases of development, from first (classical or traditional) to second (multidimensional) generation configurations, to a third phase in the mid- and late 1990s when peace support operations emerged, it currently faces another period of transition. This article speculates about the possible configuration of peacekeeping and its role in global politics. Debates about the role of peacekeeping in the international system should bring to the forefront a conception and practice of cosmopolitan peacekeeping, involving a capacity to protect civilians from violent conflict (the negative peace dimension) and a the capacity to address the human security agenda adopted by the UN in recent years.
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Female Democratic Agency: Lessons from Rural HaitiSimeunovic, Sara Lynn 07 February 2019 (has links)
Rural Haiti provides an excellent case to study the human security crisis threatening women. Haitian women are often single mothers, leading average households of 4-6. In elected positions, female leadership is seldom recognized. With only 3.5% of parliament comprised of female leaders, policies decided at the state level seldom address the challenges women face in the countryside (HDI, 2017). Haiti has the highest mortality rate for children below the age of 5 and expectant mothers in the Western Hemisphere (WHO, 2017). This crisis is a significant one. When a mother struggles, both her life and her child's are threatened.
Yet the human security crisis is not all we can learn from rural Haiti. We can also examine the unique ways women have chosen to respond to this crisis and the potential for female democratic agency. There is a significant lack of elected female officials in Haiti. This fact invites us to consider the impact rural Haitian females, such as the famn chay, are potentially making in Haiti. Famn chay are traditional birth attendants who assist mothers in their home deliveries. They are also first responders in times of crisis, providing meals to hungry families and using their collective resources to benefit children in need. Some famn chay, I suggest, are promoting an innovative form of democratic agency through their local community council, konsey kominote. Such form of agency does not focus on formal mechanisms of representation. Instead, threatened by growing social and income inequalities, this particular group has chosen to organize to address the human security crisis currently threatening women in rural Haiti. / MA / The human security crisis threatening women and children in rural Haiti has motivated Haitian traditional birth attendants known as the famn chay, to generate a response relative to the crisis and generate social change. This crisis is a significant one. When a mother struggles in childbirth, both the life of her and her child’s are threatened. Women in rural Haiti also face gender and economic inequalities. Despite these realities, the famn chay have chosen to mobilize and create what is known as a konsey kominote. Konsey kominote are community groups found throughout rural Haiti and are a key entry points for citizen engagement for many rural Haitians. This study seeks to examine the unique ways the famn chay have chosen to respond to the crisis through their konsey kominote and the potential for female democratic agency. There is a significant lack of elected female officials in Haiti. The historical roots of female gender discrimination stretch as far back as Haiti’s independence. By researching the impact rural Haitian females, such as the famn chay, are making in Haiti, we can begin to discover the potential for female democratic agency existing in rural Haiti.
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The impact of climate change on human security in South AfricaRabie, Elsa 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (Political Science))--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / The Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change is conclusive that climate change will
lead to scarcity of the basic resources that sustain life for people around the world – fresh water
supplies, food production and land for habitation and cultivation. It is argued that environmental
scarcity leads to migration which in turn results in conflict in the receiving area as competition
over resources develops.
Based on the main theories relating to resource scarcity and conflict, the purpose of this study is
to examine the link between climate change and human security. The relevance of this research
is the fact that the Stern Review concludes that climate change poses a serious threat to the world
and that Africa will be one of the hardest hit continents. Africa is already vulnerable to climate
variability and has the least capacity to respond, and this study aims to establish the impacts of
resource scarcity on human security in South Africa.
The theoretical approach addresses the much debated concept of ‘human security’ as it has
developed since the end of the Cold War and the analysis is based on the main conflict theories
that maintain that competition over access to scarce resources is one of the root causes of violent
conflict. The research design for this study is of an empirical nature with the units of analysis
being states, physical events and processes and the resulting human actions. It is a descriptive
analysis, interpreting the impact of climate change on scarce resources and the resulting
propensity for conflict.
Much of the violence against migrants has been the result of varying degrees of xenophobia
amongst all racial groups in South Africa. This study proposes the hypothesis that migration
results in increased competition over scarce resources in receiving areas, which as a result of
xenophobia leads to conflict. Based on the theoretical arguments put forward, the paper aims to
determine what policy options for adaptation, mitigation and governance would be most likely to
reduce the harmful impacts of climate change on vulnerable regions and groups of people in
South Africa and neighbouring countries in order to contain migration and lessen the likelihood
of violent conflict.
Having identified xenophobia as a spark that could ignite violent inter-group conflict it would be
useful to gain some theoretical insight into reducing group prejudice and attaining group
cooperation through inter-group contact.
It is apparent that there is no single theoretical approach that can be applied to gain a better
insight into the complex link between resource scarcity and conflict. The different theories are
mutually compatible and each theoretical perspective contributes a partial elaboration to and
additional insights into the climate change/conflict hypothesis. There is possibly room for a new
theoretical approach to gain a better understanding of the complexity and the uncertainties that
are inherent in the study of a mechanism as complex as climate change.
South Africa has the responsibility to use its global political influence to promote a shared
understanding of responsible behaviour across all societies. Active participation will enable
South Africa to guide global negotiations towards outcomes that will lessen the impact of climate
change on the most vulnerable countries and populations. In conclusion, possible policies and
actions are identified that could support these objectives. Without urgent, appropriate
intervention climate change will undermine any efforts to achieve the Millennium Development
Goals, and a crippled African continent will be a threat to world security.
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Human security policies in the Colombian conflict during the Uribe governmentDario, Diogo M. January 2013 (has links)
The aim of this dissertation is to analyse the use of narratives informed by the discourse of human security in the context of the Colombian conflict during the government of President Alvaro Uribe Velez (2002-2010). Its main contribution is to map the transformation of these narratives from the site of their formulation in the international institutions to the site of their appropriation into domestic settings; and then consider their role in the formation of the actors' strategies and the construction of the subjectivities of the individuals affected by the conflict dynamics. The research proceeds to this analysis through an investigation of the policies for the internally displaced and those relating to the rights of the victims informed by the framework of transitional justice. It shows that, with a combination of narratives of empowerment and reconciliation, they fulfill complementary roles in the construction of the subjectivities of individuals affected by the conflict in Colombia. The dissertation also concludes that the flexibility of the human security discourse allowed the Uribe government to reinforce its position.
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