Rethinking Human Security (2000)
| Venue: | Political Science Quarterly |
| Citations: | 1 - 0 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{King00rethinkinghuman,
author = {Gary King and Christopher Murray},
title = {Rethinking Human Security},
journal = {Political Science Quarterly},
year = {2000},
volume = {116}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
Over the last two decades, the international community has begun to conclude that attempts to ensure the territorial security of nation-states through military power have failed to improve the human condition. Despite astronomical levels of military spending, deaths due to military conflict have not declined. Moreover, even when the borders of some states are secure from foreign threats, the people within those states do not necessarily have freedom from crime, enough food, proper health care, education, or political freedom. In response to these developments, the international community has gradually moved to combine economic development with military security and other basic human rights to form a new concept of "human security". Unfortunately, by common assent the concept lacks both a clear definition, consistent with the aims of the international community, and any agreed upon measure of it. In this paper, we propose a simple, rigorous, and measurable definition of human security:...







