Fault lines after the Cold War: the vertical expansion of the concept of security, securitization and human security

The paper approaches the “vertical expansion of the concept of security” reconstructing the debate on the concept of security within the discipline of International Relations after the Cold War. Considering that security is an “essentially contested concept”, it offers a handful of comparisons betwe...

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Main Author: Carlos Frederico Pereira da Silva Gama
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: Universidade Federal da Grande Dourados 2014-03-01
Series:Monções
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.ufgd.edu.br/index.php/moncoes/article/view/2805
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spelling doaj-2145b9a144ea4e81a83475ec33e6dc3e2020-11-24T21:55:24ZporUniversidade Federal da Grande DouradosMonções2316-83232014-03-012412451515Fault lines after the Cold War: the vertical expansion of the concept of security, securitization and human securityCarlos Frederico Pereira da Silva Gama0Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de JaneiroThe paper approaches the “vertical expansion of the concept of security” reconstructing the debate on the concept of security within the discipline of International Relations after the Cold War. Considering that security is an “essentially contested concept”, it offers a handful of comparisons between different conceptions, which provide different accounts of “broadening” security. Barry Buzan’s Securitization approach was the first to engage seriously the challenges of “broadening” security in IR. For its merits, however, Buzan’s communitarian ontology poses a problem to “broadening” security, as it reiterates the state as the gatekeeper of protection and as the authoritative site for defining existential threats. In this sense, in spite of all its overriding ambiguity, Human Security provides a better alternative for the “vertical expansion of the concept of security” than securitization. The paper, therefore, considers the respective contributions of securitization and human security to the debate on the vertical expansion of security under the light of the relationship between states and human beings.http://ojs.ufgd.edu.br/index.php/moncoes/article/view/2805Security. Securitization. Human Security.
collection DOAJ
language Portuguese
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carlos Frederico Pereira da Silva Gama
spellingShingle Carlos Frederico Pereira da Silva Gama
Fault lines after the Cold War: the vertical expansion of the concept of security, securitization and human security
Monções
Security. Securitization. Human Security.
author_facet Carlos Frederico Pereira da Silva Gama
author_sort Carlos Frederico Pereira da Silva Gama
title Fault lines after the Cold War: the vertical expansion of the concept of security, securitization and human security
title_short Fault lines after the Cold War: the vertical expansion of the concept of security, securitization and human security
title_full Fault lines after the Cold War: the vertical expansion of the concept of security, securitization and human security
title_fullStr Fault lines after the Cold War: the vertical expansion of the concept of security, securitization and human security
title_full_unstemmed Fault lines after the Cold War: the vertical expansion of the concept of security, securitization and human security
title_sort fault lines after the cold war: the vertical expansion of the concept of security, securitization and human security
publisher Universidade Federal da Grande Dourados
series Monções
issn 2316-8323
publishDate 2014-03-01
description The paper approaches the “vertical expansion of the concept of security” reconstructing the debate on the concept of security within the discipline of International Relations after the Cold War. Considering that security is an “essentially contested concept”, it offers a handful of comparisons between different conceptions, which provide different accounts of “broadening” security. Barry Buzan’s Securitization approach was the first to engage seriously the challenges of “broadening” security in IR. For its merits, however, Buzan’s communitarian ontology poses a problem to “broadening” security, as it reiterates the state as the gatekeeper of protection and as the authoritative site for defining existential threats. In this sense, in spite of all its overriding ambiguity, Human Security provides a better alternative for the “vertical expansion of the concept of security” than securitization. The paper, therefore, considers the respective contributions of securitization and human security to the debate on the vertical expansion of security under the light of the relationship between states and human beings.
topic Security. Securitization. Human Security.
url http://ojs.ufgd.edu.br/index.php/moncoes/article/view/2805
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