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E-raamat: Routledge Handbook of Human Security

Edited by (Oxford University, UK), Edited by (London School of Economics, UK)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Nov-2013
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134619801
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Nov-2013
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134619801

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This Handbook will serve as a standard reference guide to the subject of human security, which has grown greatly in importance over the past twenty years.

Human security has been part of academic and policy discourses since it was first promoted by the UNDP in its 1994 Human Development Report. Filling a clear gap in the current literature, this volume brings together some of the key scholars and policy-makers who have contributed to its emergence as a mainstream concept, including Nobel prize winner Amartya Sen and Sadako Ogata, who jointly chaired the 2001 Commission on Human Security. Drawing upon a range of theoretical and empirical analyses, the Handbook provides examples of the use of human security in policies as diverse as disaster management, arms control and counter-terrorism, and in different geographic and institutional settings from Asia to Africa, and the UN. It also raises important questions about how the concept might be adapted and operationalised in future.

Over the course of the book, the authors draw on three key aspects of human security thinking:











Theoretical issues to do with defining human security as a specific discourse







Human security from a policy and institutional perspective, and how it is operationalised in different policy and geographic contexts





Case studies and empirical work

Featuring some of the leading scholars in the field, the Routledge Handbook of Human Security will be essential reading for all students of human security, critical security, conflict and development, peace and conflict studies, and of great interest to students of international security and IR in general.
Foreword ix
Sadako Ogata
List of abbreviations
xi
Contributors xiii
List of illustrations
xix
Introduction 1(14)
Mary Martin
Taylor Owen
PART I Concepts of human security
15(108)
1 Birth of a discourse
17(11)
Amartya Sen
2 Human security: from definitions to investigating a discourse
28(15)
Des Gasper
3 In defense of the broad view of human security
43(15)
Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh
4 Human security thresholds
58(7)
Taylor Owen
5 Human security: political authority in a global era
65(11)
Mary Kaldor
6 Critical perspectives on human security
76(18)
Keith Krause
7 The siren song of human security
94(15)
Ryerson Christie
8 Why human security? The case for resilience in an urban century
109(14)
Peter H. Liotta
Aybuke Bilgin
PART II Human security applications
123(100)
9 Violent conflict and the individual security dilemma
125(14)
Mient Jan Faber
Martijn Dekker
10 Security and development: context specific approaches to human insecurity
139(10)
Richard Jolly
11 Human security in the R2P era
149(10)
Lloyd Axworthy
12 Human security and war
159(15)
Jennifer Leaning
13 Human security and natural disasters
174(14)
Dorothea Hilhorst
Alpaslan Ozerdem
Erin Michelle Crocetti
14 Food and human security
188(9)
Robert Bailey
15 Navigating the `national security' barrier: a human security agenda for arms control in the twenty-first century
197(13)
Deepayan Basu Ray
16 Adjusting the paradigm: a human security framework for combating terrorism
210(13)
Cindy R. Jebb
Andrew A. Gallo
PART III Human security actors
223(60)
17 The United Nations and human security: between solidarism and pluralism
225(14)
Edward Newman
18 Japan and networked human security
239(12)
Yukio Takasu
19 The European Union and human security: the making of a global security actor
251(9)
Javier Solana
20 The pan-Africanization of human security
260(12)
Thomas Kwasi Tieku
21 Human security and East Asia
272(11)
Paul Evans
PART IV Human security tools
283(48)
22 An economist's perspective on human security
285(12)
Syed Mansoob Murshed
23 From concept to method: the challenge of a human security methodology
297(11)
Mary Martin
Denisa Kostovicova
24 Human security mapping
308(11)
Taylor Owen
25 Human security: idea, policy and law
319(12)
Gerd Oberleitner
Conclusion 331(4)
Taylor Owen
Mary Martin
Index 335
Mary Martin is a Research Fellow at the Civil Society and Human Security Research Unit, London School of Economics, UK.

Taylor Owen is the Research Director of the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University, USA.