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Collective security system
In: Revista moldoveneascǎ de drept internaţional şi relaţii internaţionale: publicatie periodicǎ ştiinţifico-teoreticǎ şi informaţional-practicǎ fondatǎ de Institutul de Istorie, Stat şi Drept al Academiei de Ştiinţe a Moldovei şi Asociaţia de Drept Internaţional din Republica Moldova = Moldavian journal of international law and international relations = Moldavskij žurnal meždunarodnogo prava i meždunarodni̕ch otnošenij, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 145-151
The prevention of armed conflicts and the maintenance of peace and security has always been on the agenda of states. In this respect, initially military alliances and later collective security organizations were created to respond to these challenges. This study aims to elucidate the system of collective security carried out in relevant organizations that may have a universal or regional character.
Insurances as part of "human security", their timescapes and spatiality
In: Historical social research: HSR-Retrospective (HSR-Retro) = Historische Sozialforschung, Band 35, Heft 4, S. 253-274
ISSN: 2366-6846
"In the present discussion on 'Human Security', Insurances have been only lately involved. The contribution starts with the assumption that Insurances are historically an especially fruitful object of research for the general question of the history of security regimes. It shows that, contrary to some suggestions held in risk sociology, early Mediterranean maritime insurances are to be judged rather as something completely different than the modern insurances from the 17th century onwards managed by merchants' companies and states. The latter belonged to a secular process of constructing a 'normal secure society' during enlightenment. The relationship between Timescapes, Spatiality and Insurances is analyzed: are Insurances per se an instrument of colonizing 'the future' because they are instrumental in calculating and constructing clearly defined 'risks'? or is that future orientation just one element, but is perhaps the wider socio-political context with its prevailing timescapes in which the insurance operations were embedded a changing one from pre- to postmodernity? Asking those questions the article contributes to an approach of using 'human security' as a heuristical device to explore the history of security production." (author's abstract)
Why Human Security?
In: The Whitehead journal of diplomacy and international relations, Band 7, Heft 1, S. 37-54
ISSN: 1538-6589
While no one disputes that the core element of human security is the physical protection of people, most new views are that human security should also include the empowerment of people. The varying opinions of what empowerment encompasses are all rooted in Enlightenment Liberalism. Both the broad & narrow schools of human security have conceptual & practical difficulties. Hoping to move beyond these difficulties, three ways of viewing the future of human security are discussed: as Liotta's threats vs vulnerabilities model; as a potential guiding principle for EU foreign policy; & as Taylor Owen's (2004) human security threshold. The narrow conceptualization focuses on violence, but millions die each year from nonviolent preventable human security threats. People should not have to be vulnerable to serious harm. While there must be a threshold of the harms against which they can feasibly be protected, in the name of human security, every effort should be made to protect people not just from war & conflict but from preventable disease, starvation, civil conflict, & terrorism. Tables, Figures. J. Stanton
Human Capital: Observations on Final Regulations for DOD's National Security Personnel System
Testimony issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "People are critical to any agency transformation because they define an agency's culture, develop its knowledge base, promote innovation, and are its most important asset. Thus, strategic human capital management at the Department of Defense (DOD) can help it marshal, manage, and maintain the people and skills needed to meet its critical mission. In November 2003, Congress provided DOD with significant flexibility to design a modern human resources management system. On November 1, 2005, DOD and the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) jointly released the final regulations on DOD's new human resources management system, known as the National Security Personnel System (NSPS). Several months ago, with the release of the proposed regulations, GAO observed that some parts of the human resources management system raised questions for DOD, OPM, and Congress to consider in the areas of pay and performance management, adverse actions and appeals, and labor management relations. GAO also identified multiple implementation challenges for DOD once the final regulations for the new system were issued. This testimony provides GAO's overall observations on selected provisions of the final regulations."
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Human Capital: Preliminary Observations on Proposed DOD National Security Personnel System Regulations
Testimony issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Department of Defense's (DOD) new human resources management system--the National Security Personnel System (NSPS)--will have far-reaching implications for the management of the department and for civil service reform across the federal government. The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2004 gave DOD significant authorities to redesign the rules, regulations, and processes that govern the way that more than 700,000 defense civilian employees are hired, compensated, promoted, and disciplined. In addition, NSPS could serve as a model for governmentwide transformation in human capital management. However, if not properly designed and effectively implemented, it could severely impede progress toward a more performance- and results-based system for the federal government as a whole. On February 14, 2005, the Secretary of Defense and Acting Director of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) released for public comment the proposed NSPS regulations. This testimony (1) provides GAO's preliminary observations on selected provisions of the proposed regulations, (2) discusses the challenges DOD faces in implementing the new system, and (3) suggests a governmentwide framework to advance human capital reform."
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Debates: Two views of human security - Human security
In: International journal / Canadian International Council: Canada's journal of global policy analysis, Band 63, Heft 2, S. 405-421
ISSN: 0020-7020
Human Trafficking and Human Security
In: Routledge Transnational Crime and Corruption
Human trafficking, and the related problems of organised crime and prostitution, has become a serious problem for post-Soviet countries since the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Human trafficking has a major impact on the countries of origin, the destination countries and the countries of transit, and is a concern for those studying population and migration, economics, politics, international relations and security studies. This book examines human trafficking from post-Soviet countries, exploring the full extent of the problem and discussing countermeasures, both local and at the global
Data, Human Rights & Human Security
SSRN
Working paper
Human security as 'Ethnic Security' in Kosovo
In Kosovo, the concept of human security is invoked in a three-fold manner. First of all, the international community has applied human security for the purpose of maintaining a fragile peace and stability in Kosovo. For the international community, maintaining the fragile peace meant tolerating the establishment and operationalization of Serbian parallel institutions. This leads to the second application of human security: the parallel institutions claim that their existence is necessary to provide human security for the Serbian community in Kosovo. Consequently, this undermines the capacity of Kosovo's public institutions to exercise legal authority in the north of Kosovo and in other territorial enclaves. Parallel to this, Kosovo's institutions have viewed the human security approach as a means to prove the institutional capacity of independent self-government to provide inclusive security, welfare, and integration policies for all people in Kosovo, with a special emphasis on ethnic minorities. Accordingly, human security is used by different actors in Kosovo to pursue different political agendas, which have not resulted in achieving the primary goal of furthering human welfare and fulfilment beyond mere physical security. To the contrary, the (ab)use of human security has created the conditions for fragile governance, protracted ethnic destabilization, and stagnating economic and human development.
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State Security, Societal Security, and Human Security
In: Jadavpur journal of international relations: JNR, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 1-19
ISSN: 2349-0047
Generally speaking, the traditional approach of security mainly regards states as a sole referent object of security and refutes any attempt to broaden the concept of security. This understanding is known as a realist approach. This approach, however, has been recently challenged by the Copenhagen School, the Welsh School, and the human security approach. The Copenhagen School assumes that there is now a duality of security: state security and societal security. However, both the Welsh School and the human security school look at individuals as a sole referent object of security. This article critically reviews the traditional approaches of security, the Copenhagen School, the Welsh School, and the human security approach. This article finally argues that the Copenhagen School could successfully broaden the concept of security, and therefore, it is more convincing when compared to other schools.
Human trafficking and human security
In: Routledge transnational crime and corruption series, 4
This text examines human trafficking from post-Soviet countries, exploring the full extent of the problem and discussing countermeasures, both local and at the global level, and considering the problem in all its aspects.
Human Security News
In: Journal of human security, Band 6, Heft 3, S. 73-79
ISSN: 1835-3800
Human Security News
In: Journal of human security, Band 6, Heft 2, S. 74-80
ISSN: 1835-3800
Human Security News
In: Journal of human security, Band 6, Heft 1, S. 73-79
ISSN: 1835-3800