New in Human Security!
African Ministers Criticize Foreign Indictments. Click here to read more.
Panelists Discuss Effects of Global Governance. Click here to read more.
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Enters into Force. Click here to read more.
Resources
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Human Security
Welcome to the Human Security pillar of Global Governance Watch. To skip the introduction to this pillar and proceed directly to the focus areas, please click here.

Introduction
Recently, the United Nations has been promoting a human security agenda. On January 1, 2001, in response to the outcome of the United Nations Millennium Summit, the government of Japan initiated the formation of an independent Commission on Human Security (the “Commission”). The over-arching mission of the Commission is to secure “freedom from fear” and “freedom from want.”
On 1 May 2003, Mrs. Sadako Ogata, former United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, and Professor Amartya Sen, Nobel laureate in economic science, presented the report of the Commission to the United Nations Secretary-General, Kofi Annan. The Commission’s report is titled “Human Security Now: Protecting and Empowering People.”
The report proposes a new security framework that centers directly and specifically on people. The Commission concentrates on a number of distinct but interrelated issues concerning conflict and poverty: protecting people in conflict and post-conflict situations; shielding people forced to move; overcoming economic insecurities; guaranteeing essential health care; and ensuring universal education. In its report, the Commission formulates recommendations and follow-up activities.
In the Commission’s opinion, although the state remains the primary source of security, it often fails to fulfill its security obligations and, at times, has even become a source of threat to its own people. In the Commission’s view, human security complements state security by enhancing human rights and strengthening human development. By enhancing human rights, human security seeks to protect people against a broad range of threats to individuals and communities. By strengthening human development, human security seeks to empower them to act on their own behalf.
The Commission’s findings and recommendations regarding the pursuit and realization of human security raise important questions regarding the interplay between global governance and state sovereignty. To the extent that multilateral institutions and non-governmental organizations perceive that a state is not adequately meeting the human security needs of its citizens, what powers should they have to intervene in the situation?
In recent years, officials from the United Nations, World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development have become more focused on the human rights and development agendas of their client states. However, their efforts have been limited to improving the capacity of their client states to improve the lives of their citizens. By articulating an all-encompassing right to human security that focuses exclusively on the protection and empowerment of individuals and does not rely exclusively on the state for solutions, the Commission opens the door to a model of global governance that reserves the right to ignore state sovereignty.
In the opinion of the Commission, human security encompasses all human rights, including civil and political rights, which protect people, and economic, social and cultural rights, which empower people. Protection strategies, set up by states, international agencies, NGOs and the private sector, shield people from menace. Empowerment strategies enable people to develop their resilience to difficult conditions. According to the Commission, both strategies are required in nearly all situations of human insecurity, though their form and balance will vary tremendously.
This Human Security pillar of the Global Governance Watch website examines three alternative conceptions of human security. One has to do with the protection of basic human rights contained in treaties and other instruments of international law. A second is “freedom from fear,” the protection of people from threats of violence. A third is “freedom from want,” the fulfillment of the economic, food, health, and environmental needs of individuals.
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