1st Edition

The Relationship between Human Security Discourse and International Law A Principled Approach

By Shireen Daft Copyright 2018
    286 Pages
    by Routledge

    286 Pages
    by Routledge

    The concept of human security has emerged in international relations and policy as an idea which not only seeks to relocate the focus of international society on the individual, but also challenges the current priorities of the international community. In particular it places emphasis on promoting and facilitating a nexus between security, development and human rights. It is potentially a paradigm in the making, gaining considerable momentum within the UN, international relations scholarship and regional bodies. And yet by-and-large it continues to be unexplored by the international legal community, despite the success of a number of international treaties being attributed to the discourse.



    This book seeks to address this gap, and establish the nature of the relationship between human security discourse and international law, determining whether human security can meaningfully contribute to the international legal framework. To determine this, the book analyses the core principles of human security discourse and examines the degree to which they find parallels in the existing normative structure of international law. The book examines the how the broad-narrow debate that dominates human security discourse has played out in international law-making. It goes on to consider the processes for the creation of so called ‘human security’ treaties in order to determine a blueprint for future development of international human security treaty law. In concluding Shireen Daft sets out a structured principled approach through which international legal scholarship can engage with human security, highlighting the ways in which engagement between the two fields can be sustained.

    Introduction: The Relationship between Human Security Discourse and International Law



    Chapter One: The Emergence of Human Security: The Broadening and Deeping of the Security Paradigm



    Chapter Two: The Security Problematique and the Transformative Potential of Human-Security Discourse



    Chapter Three: The Resistance of International Legal Scholarship to Human Security Discourse: An Examination



    Chapter Four: The Intersection of Human Security Discourse and International Law: In Search of Principles



    Chapter Five: Human Security Discourse: An ‘Authoritative Interpretation’ of the UN Charter?



    Chapter Six: International Law Making and a Human Security Template



    Chapter Seven: ‘Human Security Treaties’ So-Called: an Examination of the Content of Human Security Discourse in International Treaties



    Conclusion: The Relationship between Human Security Discourse and International Law: The Time for Engagement



     

    Biography

    Shireen Daft is an Associate Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia.