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ID142233
Title ProperHuman security benchmarks
Other Title Informationgoverning human wellbeing at a distance
LanguageENG
AuthorHomolar, Alexandra
Summary / Abstract (Note)When the United Nations Development Programme formally introduced the concept of human security in 1994, it was widely celebrated as a long-overdue humanist alternative to orthodox models of security. Today, human security is a buzzword for describing the complex challenges that individuals and communities face in achieving safety and wellbeing in an insecure world. This article directs attention away from the emancipatory and empowering qualities commonly ascribed to human security to explore, instead, the specific role of benchmarking within the wider human security agenda. The main focus here is on the ways in which human life has been operationalised, measured, and classified to create indicators that permit judgements about individual security and insecurity. The article argues that although a single global human security benchmark has yet to be established, the main indices used as performance metrics of human insecurity have produced a narrow understanding of what it means to live a ‘secure’ life and have reinforced the state as the main focal point of international security governance.
`In' analytical NoteReview of International Studies Vol. 41, No.5; Dec 2015: p.843-864
Journal SourceReview of International Studies Vol: 41 No 5
Key WordsUNDP ;  United Nations Development Programme ;  Human Security Agenda ;  Human Security Benchmarks ;  Governing Human Wellbeing


 
 
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