1st Edition

Human Security, Changing States and Global Responses Institutions and Practices

Edited By Sangmin Bae, Makoto Maruyama Copyright 2015

    This book critically assesses the human security challenges faced by states, focusing on how and to what extent the state is influenced by global structures and operations.

    Having grown rapidly since the 1990s, the field of human security has spawned a wide variety of academic research. This research has helped to reconceptualize the notion of security, both broadening and deepening it, and it has created a space where unconventional and multidimensional forms of security inform international policy practices. However, while various issues and cases of human security have received growing academic attention and policy interest, many of the existing books on human security focus primarily on non-state actors. This leaves a key question unanswered: why do sovereign states take on leadership roles in promoting human security?

    To answer the question of why and how national governments influence international human security policy, this volume examines the domestic political factors and structures that mediate the range of policy choices. Important domestic variables include the ‘cultural match’ (e.g., ‘Does the country often favor multilateralism and promote a rule-bound international society?’), the nature of the political interests and realities that are present (e.g., ‘Does the country see the promotion of human security as a strategic choice?’), and the occurrence of important historical events such as wars, revolutions, or natural disasters (e.g., ‘Does the country, during the crisis, help to foster a new way of managing enduring security threats?’). Using this line of analysis, the book illuminates the role of the state in handling critical human security issues and its rationale for doing so.

    This book will be of much interest to students of human security, peace studies, global governance, development studies and IR in general.

    Foreword, Hideaki Asahi 1. Introduction: The State and Human Security, Sangmin Bae  PART I: STATE BEHAVIOR, PREFERENCES, AND PERFORMANCE 2. Environmental Change and Human Security, Richard Matthew 3. Human Security Emergent? Post-Authoritarian and Post-Neoliberal Discourse and Public Policy in Latin America, David Leaman 4. Why Human Security, Why Japan, Misako Kaji  PART II: THE STATE DURING THE HUMAN SECURITY CRISIS 5. Aspiring Powers and Human Security: A Case Study from the Haitian Earthquake, Courtney Hillebrecht and Patrice C. McMahon 6. Gender, Global Crises, and Human Security, Gale Summerfield 7. The Fukushima Disaster and Human Security in Japan: From "Atoms for Peace" to People’s Peace, Makoto Maruyama  PART III: THE STATE AND INTERNATIONAL DYNAMICS 8. The European Union, Japan, and the Elusive Global Human Security Partnership, Martyn de Bruyn 9. Promises and Pretenses of Declining Street Homelessness in the United States and Japan: A Human Security Perspective, Matthew Marr 10. Water Scarcity and Food Security: Lessons from the International Food Crop Trade between Japan and the United States, Jenny Kehl

    Biography

    Sangmin Bae is Associate Professor of Political Science at Northeastern Illinois University. She is author of When the State No Longer Kills: International Human Rights Norms and Abolition of Capital Punishment (2007).

    Makoto Maruyama is Professor of Political Economy in the Department of Advanced Social and International Studies at the University of Tokyo. He is co-editor of Japanese Economy and Society under Pax-Americana (2002).