Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:815Hits:18936600Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID120873
Title ProperCreating space for emancipatory human security
Other Title Informationliberal obstructions and the potential of agonism
LanguageENG
AuthorPeterson, Jenny H
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The human security agenda, as currently operationalized by the majority of powerful states and institutions, exhibits a distinct liberal character, simultaneously contributing to and legitimizing the dominant liberal peacebuilding approach. As such, there has been a crowding out of alternative conceptions of human security, including those which focus on emancipation. This latter approach to human security offers a more transformative vision through its focus on issues such as hegemony, power, and freedom. Paths to such forms of human security have yet to materialize, largely due to the characteristics of a liberal-internationalist approach which has narrowed the political space in which challenges to the status quo can be imagined and realized. In its failure to allow for a genuine plurality of voices and in its insistence on creating false consensus, liberal peacebuilding blocks the emancipatory promise of a genuine shift from state to human security. A potential starting point for imagining alternatives to liberal peacebuilding and thus the creation of emancipatory forms of human security is to consider the role and possibilities for agonistic modes of politics and peacebuilding. Transforming inevitable differences that are part of human society into agonistic relationships-where differences exist and are negotiated among adversaries (as opposed to enemies)-opens up the political space required to challenge dominant liberal approaches to human security and enables a shift toward the emancipatory model.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Quarterly Vol. 57, No.2; Jun 2013: p.318-328
Journal SourceInternational Studies Quarterly Vol. 57, No.2; Jun 2013: p.318-328
Key WordsDominant Liberal Peacebuilding Approach ;  Powerful States ;  Human Security ;  Freedom ;  Liberal - Internationalist Approach ;  Modes of Politics ;  Emancipatory Model


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text