Reconciling the Geographies of Human Security Karen O’Brien Department of Sociology and Human...

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Reconciling the Geographies of Human Security

Karen O’Brien

Department of Sociology and Human Geography

University of Oslo, Norway

WUN SEMINAR

NOVEMBER 14, 2006

Lecture Outline

• Definitions of human security;• Human security and the geography of

inequalities;• Human security and the geography of

interconnections;• Individual and ”collective/connective” human

security – a case of cognitive dissonance;• Examples from climate change research;• Reconciling the two geographies of human

security.

Human Security – the concept

• Freedom from fear, freedom from want (1945);• Safety from chronic threats, protection from disruptions. Seven

dimension of human security: personal, environmental, economic, political, community, health, and food security (UNDP 1994);

• ”The objective of human security is to safeguard the vital core of all human lives from critical pervasive threats, in a way that is consistent with long-term fulfillment (Human Security Commission, 2003);

• Human Security is achieved when and where individuals and communities have the options necessary to end, mitigate or adapt to threats to their human, environmental and social rights; have the capacity and freedom to exercise these options; and actively participate in pursuing these options (GECHS 1999).

Human Security – the discourse

• Includes normative claims: equity, justice and fairness;

• Disaggregates to the level of individuals;• Recognizes that threats and risks will affect

individuals differentially.

Human Security – strengths and weaknesses

+ an integrative concept that “directs us to examine major connections, across the disciplinary and national boundaries...” (Gasper 2005, p. 238).

+ a policy-based discourse

+ has both protective and enabling dimensions

+ a political and theoretical concept

- too much attention to the unit of analysis, not enough attention to the interplay between levels of analysis

- notion of security has been ”militarized”

Human security and the geography of inequalities

• Recognizes deep social and economic inequalities;

• Emphasizes the role of context;• Focuses on structures that create insecurities

based on race, class, caste, gender, age, or simply place;

• Relational aspects: one individual’s security is often another’s insecurity.

Human security and the geography of interconnection

• Takes a broader view of human security, as not only collective, but ”connective”;

• Sees humans as part of a larger ”global system”, where processes and outcomes are linked over space and time.

Cognitive dissonance?

• Tensions in distinguishing between individual human security and collective/connective human security;

• Exemplified by climate change, where the uneven outcomes are superimposed on a geography of inequalities and inequities; Climate change is likely to transform the context for human security, creating new and potentially unexpected outcomes;

• Difficulties relating individual dimensions of human security to collective-connective dimensions.

Climate change as an equity issue

• Not everyone contributes equally;• Not everyone has an equal voice in deciding

what to do about it;• Not everyone will be equally affected – some

will benefit, others are highly vulnerable;• Vulnerability analyses can be used to identify

where, how and why human security may be affected by climate change.

Climate change as a global issue

• Individuals and communities exist as part of a larger context, and changing the larger context (warmer temperatures, extreme climate events, sea level rise, melting of glaciers, etc.) is likely to affect both the secure and the insecure;

• Examples: Melting of Arctic sea ice, Changing variability and extreme events.

The Northern Sea Route

• New opportunities: for shipping, trade, consumption; for northern communities; for countries/companies who have oil and mineral rights;

• Equity dimensions: may negatively influence resource-based livelihoods, and individuals and communities who cannot adapt to rapid change;

• Collective/connective dimensions: sea level rise, coastal storms, accelerated warming.

Changing variability and extreme events

• The magnitude and frequency of extreme events will change with the climate;

• Many small-scale farmers are already vulnerable to current variability;

• The capacity to adapt to changing conditions is unequal.

Source: Smit and Pilisofova 2003

Adaptive capacities differ, whether we are talking about Norway or India.

Cognitive dissonance & climate change• Results when beliefs in the individual dimension of

human security are held firm, in the face of growing evidence of the interconnected dimension;

• E.g.,a belief in benefits from the Northern Sea Route does not resonate with the possibility of losses that can result from climate change (temporal dissonance);

• E.g., a belief in the struggle for livelihoods and the need to cope with normal variability and everyday insecurities does not resonate with the possibility of creating a different future climate;

• The individual dimension of human security dominates over the collective/connective dimension of human security.

Reducing the dissonance?

• ”The theory of cognitive dissonance states that contradicting cognitions serve as a driving force that compels the mind to acquire or invent new thoughts or beliefs, or to modify existing beliefs, so as to reduce the amount of dissonance (conflict) between cognitions”*

• Climate change strategies: emphasize adaptation, invoke fear, make moral and ethical appeals, promote indifference… redefine human security??

*(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_dissonance)

Human security: A useful discourse?

• Can give meaning and relevance to global issues;

• But does not capture the collective/connective dimension of human security;

• Focuses on human development and the North-South divide, reinforcing an ”us and them” perspective, rather than an ”I and we” perspective.

Redefining human security in the context of global change

• ”Human security as a collective and connective state of well-being that is continually negotiated by and for individuals and communities who recognize that processes and outcomes are linked to one another across both space and time.”

© Seppo Leinonen, www.seppo.net

Thank you!