Newman CriticalHumanSecurityStudies
Newman CriticalHumanSecurityStudies
Newman CriticalHumanSecurityStudies
net/publication/231962570
CITATIONS READS
193 8,773
1 author:
Edward Newman
University of Leeds
85 PUBLICATIONS 1,683 CITATIONS
SEE PROFILE
Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects:
European Union (EU)' s Engagement with Human Protection and the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) View project
All content following this page was uploaded by Edward Newman on 12 February 2016.
Abstract. 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 relation-
ship 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).
Introduction
This article will explore why critical and non-traditional security studies have
largely shunned human security ideas.1 In particular, the contributions of human
security may already be subsumed within critical security studies, and thus may
be superfluous as a distinct field of study. In addition, the policy orientation of
human security – and its adoption as a policy framework by some governments –
has made critical security scholars suspicious of human security as a hegemonic
discourse co-opted by the state. Moreover, human security arguments are generally
‘problem-solving’. They do not generally engage in epistemological, ontological or
methodological debates. Human security is therefore considered – and as a result
generally dismissed – as ‘uncritical’ and unsophisticated by critical security
scholars. For its part, because human security scholars wish to remain policy
relevant – and accessible to policy circles – they have been reluctant to explore
overtly ‘critical’ security studies themes, either because they feel these are
unnecessary or because they fear that such theoretical pursuits will alienate them
from the policy world. In addition, many scholars addressing human security
1
Critical security studies can be conceived broadly to embrace a number of different non-traditional
approaches which challenge conventional (military, state-centric) approaches to security studies and
security policy. Alternatively, Critical Security Studies can be conceived more narrowly, to represent
a particular approach to non-traditional security studies (for example, that proposed by Ken Booth
– see below). This article uses the term critical security studies in the former, general sense, unless
explicitly indicated.
77
78 Edward Newman
Human security
Human security suggests that security policy and security analysis, if they are to be
effective and legitimate, must focus on the individual as the referent and primary
beneficiary. In broad terms human security is ‘freedom from want’ and ‘freedom
from fear’: positive and negative freedoms and rights as they relate to fundamental
individual needs. Human security is normative; it argues that there is an ethical
responsibility to re-orient security around the individual in line with internationally
recognised standards of human rights and governance. Much human security
scholarship is therefore explicitly or implicitly underpinned by a solidarist
commitment, and some is cosmopolitan in ethical orientation. Some human
security scholarship also seeks to present explanatory arguments concerning the
nature of security, deprivation and conflict. In addition, most scholars and
practitioners working on human security emphasise the policy orientation of this
approach; they believe that the concept of human security can and should result
in policy changes which improve the welfare of people.
Growing interest in human security since the early 1990s can be seen within a
particular historical and social context which saw the erosion of the narrow,
state-centric, militarised national security paradigm in policy and academic circles.
This background is well documented elsewhere and need not be examined closely
here.2 There is no uncontested definition of, or approach to, human security; very
few supporters of the concept would describe it as a ‘paradigm’ (although
Hampson does).3 Like all non-traditional security approaches, human security – as
a starting point – challenges orthodox neorealist conceptions of international
security. Scholars of human security argue that for many people in the world –
perhaps even most – the greatest threats to ‘security’ come from internal conflicts,
2
Fen Osler Hampson, Madness in the Multitude: Human Security and World Disorder (New York:
Oxford University Press, 2001); Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh and Anuradha Chenoy, Human Security
Concepts and Implications (London: Routledge, 2006); Caroline Thomas, Global Governance,
Development and Human Security (London: Pluto, 2000); Edward Newman, ‘Human Security’,
International Studies Compendium Project On-Line (ISO), International Studies Association, forth-
coming, 2010.
3
Hampson, Madness in the Multitude, p. 12.
Critical human security studies 79
4
Ramesh Thakur and Edward Newman, ‘Introduction: Non-traditional security in Asia’, in Ramesh
Thakur and Edward Newman (eds), Broadening Asia’s Security Discourse and Agenda: Political,
Social, and Environmental Perspectives (Tokyo, UN University Press, 2004), pp. 1–15; Tadjbakhsh
and Chenoy, Human Security Concepts and Implications; Commission on Human Security, Human
Security Now – Report of the Commission on Human Security (New York: UN Publications, 2003).
5
United Nations Development Programme Human Development Report 1994 (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1994), p. 23.
80 Edward Newman
the vital core of all human lives in ways that enhance human freedoms and human
fulfilment. Human security means protecting fundamental freedoms – freedoms that are the
essence of life. It means protecting people from critical (severe) and pervasive (widespread)
threats and situations. It means using processes that build on people’s strengths and
aspirations. It means creating political, social, environmental, economic, military and
cultural systems that together give people the building blocks of survival, livelihood and
dignity.6
The broad approach to human security sacrifices analytical precision in favour of
general normative persuasion: it focuses on the issues which undermine the life
chances of the largest numbers of people. The reality is that, by far, the biggest
killers in the world are extreme poverty, preventable disease, and the consequences
of pollution. According to this approach, any conception of security which neglects
this reality is conceptually, empirically and ethically inadequate.
The second approach to human security is narrower, and focuses on the human
consequences of armed conflict and the dangers posed to civilians by repressive
governments and situations of state failure.7 Modern conflict reflects a high level
of civil war and state collapse which has resulted in a high rate of victimisation and
displacement of civilians, especially women and children. According to this
approach to human security, conventional security analysis is woefully inadequate
for describing and explaining the realities of armed conflict and its impact upon
humanity.
The third approach – particularly in policy circles and amongst scholars
interested in policy – uses human security as an umbrella concept for approaching
a range of ‘non-traditional’ security issues – such as HIV/AIDS, drugs, terrorism,
small arms, inhumane weapons such as anti-personnel landmines, and trafficking in
human beings – with the simple objective of attracting greater attention and
resources for tackling them.8 In this usage there is little effort made to contribute
to theory. Indeed, re-labelling such challenges rarely helps to deepen understanding
of the nature of these diverse phenomena. The overriding objective is to raise the
visibility of neglected problems and to influence policy.
Finally, a small number of scholars – who reflect both the broad and narrow
approaches to human security – are attempting to understand human security from
a theoretical perspective and integrate human security into security studies.9 From
this perspective, human security is deployed to explore theoretical debates
6
Commission on Human Security, Human Security Now, p. 4.
7
Andrew Mack, ‘A Signifier of Shared Values’, Security Dialogue, 35:3 (2004), pp. 366–7; S. Neil
MacFarlane and Yuen Foong Khong, Human Security and the UN: A Critical History (Blooming-
ton: Indiana University Press, 2006).
8
Felix Dodds and Tim Pippard, Human and Environmental Security: An Agenda for Change (London:
Earthscan, 2005); M. Leen, The European Union, HIV/AIDS and Human Security (Dublin: Dochas,
2004); Adil Najam, Environment, Development and Human Security: Perspectives from South Asia
(Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 2003); L. Chen, J. Leaning and V. Narasimhan (eds),
Global Health Challenges for Human Security (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2003); R. L.
Callaway and J. Harrelson-Stephens, ‘Toward a theory of terrorism: Human security as a
determinant of terrorism’, Studies in Conflicts and Terrorism, 29:8 (2006), pp. 773–96.
9
Paul Roe, ‘The ‘value’ of positive security’, Review of International Studies, 34:4 (2008), pp. 777–94;
Edward Newman, ‘Human Security and Constructivism’, International Studies Perspectives, (2:3)
(2001), pp. 239–51; Giorgio Shani, Makoto Sato and Mustapha Kamal Pasha (eds), Protecting
Human Security in a Post 9/11 World: Critical and Global Insights (London: Palgrave, 2007);
Caroline Thomas, ‘Global governance and human security’, in Rorden Wilkinson and S. Hughes
(eds), Global Governance. Critical Perspectives (London: Routledge, 2002); Kyle Grayson, ‘The
Biopolitics of Human Security’, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 21:3 (2008), pp. 383–401.
Critical human security studies 81
10
Ian Gibson and Betty Reardon ‘Human Security: Toward Gender Inclusion?’, in Shani, Sato and
Pasha (eds), Protecting Human Security in a Post 9/11 World; David Roberts, Human Insecurity:
Global Structures of Violence (London, Zed Books, 2008); Thanh-Dam Truong, Saskia Wieringa and
Amrita Chhachhi (eds), Engendering Human Security.
11
Caroline Thomas, Global Governance, Development and Human Security (London: Pluto, 2000), p. 4.
12
As of 2009 membership included: Austria, Canada, Chile, Costa Rica, Greece, Ireland, Jordan,
Mali, Norway, Slovenia, South Africa (observer), Switzerland and Thailand. See {http://www.
humansecuritynetwork.org/}.
13
Tadjbakhsh and Chenoy, Human Security Concepts and Implications, p. 5.
82 Edward Newman
14
Keith Krause, ‘Is Human Security “More than Just a Good Idea?”’, in M. Brzoska and P. J. Croll
(eds), Promoting Security: But How and For Whom? Contributions to BICC’s Ten-year Anniversary
Conference BICC brief 30 (2004), p. 44.
15
Andrew Mack, ‘A Signifier of Shared Values’, p. 49.
16
MacFarlane and Yuen Foong Khong, Human Security and the UN, pp. 237, 247.
17
Barry Buzan, ‘A Reductionist, Idealistic Notion that Adds Little Analytical Value’, Security
Dialogue, 35:3 (2004), pp. 369–70.
18
MacFarlane and Yuen Foong Khong, Human Security and the UN, p. 17.
19
Security Dialogue, Special Section: What is Human Security? Various authors, 35:3 (2004), pp. 345–
72; Taylor Owen, ‘Human Security – Conflict, Critique and Consensus: Colloquium Remarks and
a Proposal for a Threshold-Based Definition’, Security Dialogue, 35:3 (2004), pp. 373–87; Nicholas
Thomas and William T. Tow, ‘The Utility of Human Security: Sovereignty and Human
Intervention’, Security Dialogue, 33:2 (2002), pp. 177–92; Alex J. Bellamy and Matt McDonald,
Critical human security studies 83
There have been attempts to overcome the definitional debate. King and
Murray, for example, proposed a quantitative model of human security based upon
the ‘number of years of future life spent outside a state of generalized poverty’.20
Roberts has suggested a quantitative measure of human insecurity in terms of
‘avoidable civilian deaths.’21 Tadjbakhsh and Chenoy have argued that human
security must necessarily embrace a broad range of threats because threats are
intrinsically linked.22 Others have suggested that the definition of human security
should not be preoccupied with broad and narrow models; instead, the definition
should be based upon a threshold. According to this, threats are regarded as
security challenges when they reach a certain threshold of human impact, whatever
the source. An attempt to articulate a threshold-based definition of human security
is the following:
Human security is concerned with the protection of people from critical and life-threatening
dangers, regardless of whether the threats are rooted in anthropogenic activities or natural
events, whether they lie within or outside states, and whether they are direct or structural.
It is ‘human-centered’ in that its principal focus is on people both as individuals and as
communal groups. It is ‘security oriented’ in that the focus is on freedom from fear, danger
and threat.23
For a large number of people interested in promoting human security as a
normative movement, the definition debate is incidental. They have a simple
objective: to improve the lives of those who are perilously insecure. Conceptual or
analytical coherence is not essential for this task. But in the world of scholarship
the differences between a broad and narrow approach have undermined the unity
of human security. Attempts to overcome this – for example through a threshold
approach – have not as yet resolved this debate. But the debate itself is an
interesting space for considering competing visions of security and international
politics, and the study of these. As such, what is sometimes dismissed as a fruitless
and interminable debate about the definition of human security is actually a
creative process.
The relationship between human security and other non-traditional security studies
Non-traditional and critical security studies (broadly defined, and distinct from
human security scholarship) also challenges the neorealist orthodoxy as a starting
point, although generally from a more sophisticated theoretical standpoint than
found in the human security literature. Critical approaches challenge most, or all,
of the key features of (neo)realism: its emphasis upon parsimony and coherence;
its privileging of a rational, state centric worldview based upon the primacy of
‘“The Utility of Human Security”: Which Humans? What Security? A Reply to Thomas and Tow’,
Security Dialogue, 33:3 (2002), pp. 373–7; Grayson, ‘The Biopolitics of Human Security’.
20
Gary King and Christopher Murray, ‘Rethinking Human Security’, Political Science Quarterly, 116:4
(2001–2), pp. 585–610.
21
Roberts, Human Insecurity.
22
Tadjbakhsh and Chenoy, Human Security Concepts and Implications.
23
Ramesh Thakur and Edward Newman, ‘Introduction: Non-traditional security in Asia’, in Ramesh
Thakur and Edward Newman (eds), Broadening Asia’s Security Discourse and Agenda: Political,
Social, and Environmental Perspectives (Tokyo, UN University Press, 2004), p. 4.
84 Edward Newman
24
Michael Sheehan, International Security. An Analytical Survey (Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Rienner,
2005) pp. 177–8.
25
Steve Smith, ‘The Contested Concept of Security’, in Ken Booth (ed.), Critical Security Studies and
World Politics (Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Renner, 2005), p. 27.
26
Smith, ‘The Contested Concept of Security’, p. 28.
27
B. Buzan, O. Waever and J. de Wilde, Security: A New Framework for Analysis (Boulder: Lynne
Rienner, 1998); Keith Krause and Michael Williams, ‘Broadening the Agenda of Security Studies:
Politics and Methods’, Mershon International Studies Review, 40:2 (1996), pp. 229–54; Keith Krause
and M. Williams, Critical Security Studies: concepts and Cases (London: UCL Press, 1997).
28
Krause, K. and M. Williams, Critical Security Studies.
Critical human security studies 85
differ on what the referent object of security should be, whether the objective
should be to securitise or desecuritise (and the implications of this), and whether
the emphasis should be on normative or explanatory theory. Some non-traditional
approaches retain the state as the referent object of study, and broaden their
analysis of the threats to the state, to include – for example – economic, societal,
environmental, and political security challenges. Barry Buzan’s landmark book,
People, States and Fear, suggested that the individual is the ‘irreducible base unit’
for explorations of security but the referent of security must remain the state as it
is the central actor in international politics and the principal agent for addressing
insecurity.29
Other critical approaches challenge the state-centricity of security analysis
fundamentally, and argue that individuals or humans collectively should be the
referent object of security. For Booth: ‘A critical theory of security seeks to
denaturalize and historicize all human-made political referents, recognizing only
the primordial entity of the socially embedded individual.’30 He continues: ‘The
only transhistorical and permanent fixture in human society is the individual
physical being, and so this must naturally be the ultimate referent in the security
problematique’.31
A further distinction concerns the consequences of treating an issue as a
security threat, which raises the question of negative and positive securitisation.
Some scholars – inspired by what became known as the ‘Copenhagen School’ –
challenge the securitisation process because this process moves issues from ‘normal’
(accountable/democratic) politics to ‘emergency’ politics. Securitisation thus mobi-
lises exceptional resources and political powers which are not necessarily positive
or proportionate to the security challenges, and are sometimes manipulated for
political purposes in order to create fear or curtail freedoms. Thus, securitisation
studies ‘aims to gain an increasingly precise understanding of who securitizes, on
what issues (threats), for whom (referent objects), why, with what results, and, not
least, under what conditions (that is, what explains when securitization is
successful’.32 According to such an approach, securitising an issue – for example
refugees – does not necessarily result in positive outcomes for the human rights of
such people.33 This approach has been successfully applied to a number of political
challenges – such as conflict resolution – in order to demonstrate how securitisation
has exacerbated fears and anxieties and entrenched conflict, and how desecuriti-
sation can provide incentives for accommodation and cooperation.
Other critical approaches to security studies suggest the opposite: that
broadening securitisation will broaden ‘real’ security (and bring resources and
29
Barry Buzan, People, states and fear: the national security problem in international relations (Brighton,
Sussex: Wheatsheaf, 1983).
30
Ken Booth, ‘Beyond Critical Security Studies’, in Ken Booth (ed.), Critical Security Studies and
World Politics (Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Renner, 2005), p. 268.
31
Booth, ‘Beyond Critical Security Studies’, p. 264.
32
Buzan, Waever and de Wilde Security: A New Framework for Analysis, p. 32.
33
Astri Suhrke, ‘Human security and the protection of refugees’, in Edward Newman and Joanne van
Selm (eds), Refugees and Forced Displacement: International Security, Human Vulnerability, and the
State (Tokyo: UNU Press, 2003); Ole Waever, Barry Buzan, M. Kelstrup and P. Lemaitre, Identity,
Migration, and the New Security Order in Europe (London, Pinter, 1993); Maggie Ibrahim, ‘The
securitization of migration: A racial discourse’, International Migration 43:5 (2005), pp. 163–87.
86 Edward Newman
attention) to a wider range of problems and actors, beyond the state. In this way,
the ‘Welsh School’ has a more positive view of security, in common with human
security approaches.34
Non-traditional approaches to security also differ in their normative approach.
The ‘Copenhagen School’ has been described as primarily descriptive and
explanatory in orientation. For quite different reasons some anti-foundational and
deconstructionist post-modern readings claim that normative claims are baseless
because there are no legitimate means of prescribing alternative policy frameworks.
In contrast, the Welsh School is strongly normative, seeing security as a means to
emancipation: ‘freeing people, as individuals and collectivities, from contingent and
structural oppressions’.35 This approach to critical security studies has a self-
consciously reflectivist epistemology, and in some ways sees security as socially –
and intersubjectively – constructed and thus contingent on power relations. Booth
and Jones believe that critical security theory should follow the Frankfurt School
of critical social theory.36 They emphasise the potential for change in human
relations, explicitly rejecting the determinism of realism and promoting alternative
objectives for ‘security’. Booth thus draws parallels between realism and post-
modernism: ‘Political realists and poststructuralists seem to share a fatalistic view
that humans are doomed to insecurity; regard the search for emancipation as both
futile and dangerous; believe in a notion of the human condition; and relativize
norms. Both leave power where it is in the world: deconstruction and deterrence
are equally static theories.’37
Human security has generally not been treated seriously within these academic
security studies debates, and it has not contributed much either. The dissonance
between orthodox neorealist security studies and human security is hardly a
mystery. But why is critical security studies inhospitable towards human security?
If critical security studies argues that ‘security only makes sense if individual
human beings are seen as its primary referent, or subject’,38 why have critical
security studies not taken notice of human security, which has the same goal?
Booth asks: ‘why should certain issues – human rights, economic justice and so on
– be kept off the security agenda? They are, after all, crucial security questions for
somebody, if not for those benefiting from statist power structures.’39 It is exactly
the question asked by those interested in human security. A critical theory
approach to security involves ‘de-essentializing and deconstructing prevailing
claims about security’.40 Human security approaches seek to do the same, albeit
34
R. W. Jones, Security, Strategy and Critical Theory (Boulder Colorado: Lynne Rienner Publications,
1999); Booth (ed.), Critical Security Studies and World Politics.
35
Ken Booth, ‘Emancipation: prologue’, in Ken Booth (ed.), Critical Security Studies and World
Politics (Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Renner, 2005); Ken Booth, ‘Security and Emancipation’, Review
of International Studies 17:4 (1991), pp. 313–26.
36
Jones, Security, Strategy and Critical Theory; Booth (ed.), Critical Security Studies and World
Politics.
37
Ken Booth, ‘Beyond Critical Security Studies’, in Booth (ed.), Critical Security Studies and World
Politics, pp. 270–71.
38
Bill McSweeney, Security, Identity, and Interests: A Sociology of International Relations (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1999), p. 208.
39
Ken Booth, ‘Security and Self: Reflections of a Fallen Realist’, in Keith Krause and Michael
Williams (eds), Critical Security Studies. Concepts and Cases (London: UCL Press, 1997), p. 111.
40
Michael C. Williams and Keith Krause, ‘Preface: Toward Critical Security Studies’, in Krause and
Williams (eds), Critical Security Studies: Concepts and Cases, p. xiv.
Critical human security studies 87
Explaining the lack of engagement between human security and critical security
studies
41
Steve Smith, ‘The Increasing Insecurity of Security Studies: Conceptualizing Security in the Last
Twenty Years’, in Stuart Croft and Terry Terriff (eds), Critical Reflections on Security and Change
(London: Frank Cass, Smith 2000).
42
Sheehan, International Security, pp. 75–80; Steve Smith, ‘The Contested Concept of Security’, in
Booth (ed.), Critical Security Studies and World Politics, p. 54.
88 Edward Newman
image of the velvet glove on the iron hand of hard power.’43 It allows states to ‘tick
the “good international citizen” box of foreign policy, but without significantly
changing their behaviour’.44 Grayson also claims that ‘Human security’s incitement
to discourse is infused with a set of power-relations predisposed towards the
ontological, epistemological, and analytic status quo.’45 It is therefore interesting
that, according to Booth, scholars writing from a realist perspective are more likely
than critical academics to endorse the governmental approach to human security.46
According to this critical line of reasoning, human security can never overcome its
central paradox: it apparently calls for a critique of the structures and norms that
produce human insecurity, yet the ontological starting point of most human
security scholarship and its policy orientation reinforce these structures and norms.
In addition, when states do deploy the human security motif, there is a danger
that it is to form a pretext for hegemonic and interventionist – even military –
policies. The concern is that at best these are well intentioned but ethnocentric and
paternalistic adventures, and at worst human security can be a pretext for outright
power politics. As Shani argues, there is a concern that human security ‘may be
sufficiently malleable to allow itself to be used to legitimize greater state control
over society in the name of protection.’47
In a related manner, human security has become controversial in some policy
circles, and is now seen by some states as a form of Western hegemony and liberal
cultural imperialism.48 This is illustrated by the association between human security
and ‘humanitarian intervention’ and the changing norms regarding state sover-
eignty and human rights. Referring to the controversial use of military force in
1999, Lloyd Axworthy, Canada’s former foreign minister, suggested: ‘the crisis in
Kosovo, and the Alliance’s response to it, is a concrete expression of this human
security dynamic at work [. . .]’49 Even the former UN Secretary-General, Kofi
Annan, known to support the human security idea, described a ‘developing
international norm in favour of intervention to protect civilians from wholesale
slaughter and suffering and violence’, and linked this to the human security idea.50
For these and other reasons some governments are sensitive about the human
security label and even object to its use in multilateral forums. In the UN,
secretariat staff members have learned to avoid the term even though they promote
the key messages of human security.51
There have also been concerns that the policy community’s use of the human
security idea is distorting its true meaning and – more mischievously – being
deployed as a cover for dubious political objectives. The Philippine Human
43
Ken Booth, Theory of World Security (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007), p. 324.
44
Booth, Theory of World Security, pp. 323–4.
45
Grayson, ‘The Biopolitics of Human Security’.
46
Booth, Theory of World Security, p. 326.
47
Giorgi Shani, ‘Introduction’, in Shani, Sato and Pasha (eds), Protecting Human Security in a Post
9/11 World, p. 7.
48
Ikechi Mgbeoji, ‘The civilised self and the barbaric other: Imperial delusions of order and the
challenges of human security’, Third World Quarterly 27:5 (2006), pp. 855–869.
49
Lloyd Axworthy, ‘Canada and Human Security: The Need for Leadership’, International Journal,
52:2 (1997), pp. 183–96.
50
Kofi Annan, Speech of the UN Secretary-General to the General Assembly, 20 September, 1999.
New York: United Nations, 1999.
51
Edward Newman, ‘Human Security: Mainstreamed Despite the Conceptual Ambiguity?’, St.
Antony’s International Review, 1:2 (2005), pp. 24–36.
Critical human security studies 89
Security Act of 2007, for example, is essentially an ‘anti-terror law’ which would
warrant special counter-terrorism measures and – according to critics – encroach
upon human rights. Less controversially, the EU has embraced the human security
concept for some of its external relations issues – including peacekeeping – which
is an application which also raises connotations of a ‘liberal’ vision of how the
world should be organised. (Yet some scholars have suggested that human security
has Asian roots).52
A final implication of the policy orientation of human security is provided by
Astri Surhke (2004). She suggests that academic interest in human security has
followed from policy initiatives. The policy world’s support of human security is
fickle; Canada, for example, once a high-profile champion of the concept, has
conspicuously distanced itself from human security because it is associated with a
previous government. If the policy world is losing interest in human security, will
human security be able to independently survive as an academic pursuit?
Thirdly, human security scholarship has tended to be ‘problem-solving’. This is
an application of Robert Cox’s famous analysis.53 Problem-solving approaches
take prevailing social relationships, and the institutions into which they are
organised, as the given and inevitable framework for action. In contrast, critical
approaches question how institutions emerge and the interests they represent and
serve, and do not accept existing policy parameters as a given or necessarily
legitimate. Most human security scholarship has been problem solving, largely
because of its origins in foreign policy initiatives and amongst scholars interested
in international organisations and development. Human security is in itself
fundamentally ‘critical’, but this unfortunately is not how most human security
arguments have been approached. They do not engage in epistemological,
ontological or methodological debates; indeed, much human security work is
seemingly ignorant of these debates, or finds them unnecessary. Human security
generally adopts a policy oriented approach which attempts to improve human
welfare within the political, legal and practical parameters of the ‘real world’.
According to this, human security scholarship seeks to generate new and persuasive
policy-relevant insights whilst accepting the prevailing policy approaches and
assumptions. Human security scholars do not tend to fundamentally question
existing structures and institutions of power, gender, and distribution in relation to
economic and political organisation (although there are a few notable excep-
tions).54 Human security approaches would generally not support the argument
that ‘“Security” is a socially constructed concept. It has a specific meaning only
within a particular social context.’55 Few scholars of human security would accept
the idea that there is no basis for an objective understanding of ‘security’ or that
there is no possibility of epistemic consensus on what ‘security’ means. Few would
therefore see it as an ‘essentially contested concept’, in the sense suggested by
52
Amitav Acharya, ‘Human Security: East Versus West’, International Journal LVI, 3 (2001), pp.
442–60; Paul Evans, ‘A Concept Still on the Margins, but Evolving from its Asian Roots’, Security
Dialogue, 35:3 (2004), pp. 263–4.
53
Robert Cox, ‘Social Forces, States and World Orders: Beyond International Relations Theory’,
Millennium, 10:2 (1981), pp. 126–55.
54
Roberts, Human Insecurity; Shani, Sato and Pasha (eds), Protecting Human Security in a Post 9/11
World; Grayson, ‘The Biopolitics of Human Security’; Thomas, ‘Global governance and human
security’.
55
Sheehan, International Security, p. 43.
90 Edward Newman
56
W. B. Gallie, ‘Essentially Contested Concepts’, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, 56 (1956),
pp. 167–98.
57
Ken Booth, ‘Critical Explorations’, in Booth (ed.), Critical Security Studies and World Politics, p. 9.
Critical human security studies 91
60
Commission on Human Security.
94 Edward Newman