ABSTRACT

This book examines how national security strategies relate to an emerging common European or global vision of security, and to human security ideas.

Human security and national security are often regarded as competing and mutually antagonistic; the former was proposed and has been operationalised in ways which represent a paradigm shift away from state-centric approaches and the dominance of national-security perspectives. This has led to human security being associated with a broadening of the security agenda to encompass not only physical security, the use of force and military capabilities, but also the provision of material well-being and dignity to vulnerable communities.

This edited volume seeks to identify key concepts and themes in the national discourse of several European countries, addressing security at a meta-narrative and conceptual level, illustrating the changes taking place in approaches to security, and in particular, mapping moves away from a paradigm of ‘national security’ to one which might be called ‘human security’. It also enables an assessment of whether national security is currently converging at either European or global levels.

This book will be of much interest to students of human security, European politics, discourse analysis, war and conflict studies, and IR/security studies in general.

chapter |23 pages

French security policy

A human security perspective

chapter |23 pages

Past present

The development of German security strategy after the Cold War

chapter |25 pages

A ‘force for good'?

British national security and human security in an age of counterterrorism

chapter |21 pages

Not there yet

Spain's security strategy from a human security perspective

chapter |20 pages

Swedish security strategy in the twenty-first century

What role for human security?

chapter |15 pages

Human security as a ‘floating signifier'

Russia's reinterpretation of the concept