HYNEK, Nikola and David BOSOLD. A History and Genealogy of the Freedom from Fear Doctrine. International Journal. Canada: CIIA, 2009, vol. 64, No 3, p. 142-160, 18 pp. ISSN 0020-7020.
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Basic information
Original name A History and Genealogy of the Freedom from Fear Doctrine
Name in Czech Historie a genealogie doktríny osvobození od strachu
Authors HYNEK, Nikola (203 Czech Republic, guarantor) and David BOSOLD (276 Germany).
Edition International Journal, Canada, CIIA, 2009, 0020-7020.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study 50601 Political science
Country of publisher Canada
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Impact factor Impact factor: 0.287 in 2008
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14230/09:00028667
Organization unit Faculty of Social Studies
UT WoS 000208052000009
Keywords in English human security; Canada; freedom from fear
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: PhDr. RNDr. Nikola Hynek, M.A., PgDip Res, učo 45154. Changed: 25/11/2009 22:20.
Abstract
A discussion of the relevance of the human security agenda, and of its impact on Canadian foreign and security policy, is these days likely to cause scholars and policymakers to suppress a yawn. Such a reaction largely stems from a belief that all relevant aspects of the human security agenda have been fully understood and scrutinised. The full story has been told, so to speak. In this paper we argue against the idea that the human security agenda is a story of the past, at least when it comes to: 1) understanding what made the human security agenda possible in the first place; and 2) how the alleged new diplomacy that accompanied the human security agenda was a reflection of broader politico-economic changes within rather than outside of Canada. Using a Foucaultian genealogical perspective, the following analysis provides an alternative account of the origins of the Canadian human security agenda. In so doing, it challenges and adds to the dominant historical narrative of the origins of the human security agenda, produced by government documents, policymakers, and some academic analyses. Specifically, this article presents a genealogical investigation of the Freedom from Fear (FFF) doctrine. The FFF doctrine emerged from a narrowing of the human security concept by the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT) in the late 1990s. Our genealogical investigation analyses why DFAIT chose to narrow its human security agenda around FFF. Second, the article examines the underlying rationale of this narrower FFF agenda. We conclude that the FFF doctrine was shaped by a political economy of power that existed in Canadian society.
Abstract (in Czech)
Text se zabývá historií a genealogií doktríny osvobození od fyzického ohrožení na příkladu Kanady
Links
KJB708140803, research and development projectName: Lidská bezpečnost: východiska, koncept a použití
Investor: Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Human Security: Foundations, Concept and Practical Use
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