‘SOMETHING’ SECURITY – WHAT EXACTLY DOES IT MEAN?

‘Security’ can be described by:

General qualifying words egSectoral words eg

CollectiveEnergy

ComprehensiveHealth/medical

‘Hard’ and ‘Soft’Infrastructure

HumanEnvironmental/ecological

ExistentialTransport (Aviation, Maritime)

SocietalBorder/frontier

IT/Cyber-

The sectoral (functional) varieties are what we are dealing with here.

BEING MORE PRECISE ABOUT ‘SOMETHING’ SECURITY

Is the security problem:Types of remedies:

  1. Being exposed to something that hurts humans?Action again threat/risk
  2. Having too much of something?Resilience, survival planning
  1. Not having enough of something?Competition for supplies
  2. Being dependent on something and worryingor cooperative sharing

that it may be taken away?Diversity of sources, redundancy

  1. Being dependent on something and damagingSelf-restraint, diversification

it through our own actions?

EXAMPLES:

Infrastructure security – basically (d)

Environmental security – (a) for natural disasters and climate change impact but also (e). Health is a similar case

Energy security – basically (c) and (d) but also (a) if we use dangerous sources eg nuclear

Transport, aviation, maritime, border and cyber- security involve things that we need and rely on (d) but which expose us in the process to human attacks and natural accidents (a)

‘SOMETHING AND SECURITY’ (eg ‘Energy and Security’) IS ANOTHER ISSUE

Two directions of interplay between the sectoral dimensions and more ‘traditional’ security processes (defence, conflict, internal threats):

A. Sectoral security concerns can lead to conflict within and between states, or to other violent and damaging behavior (oppression, exploitation, terrorism, smuggling and criminality):

Especially in cases (c) and (d)

Especially where states seek to directly control resources and transfers, and where a state or company tries to control resources on the territory of another

Especially where distribution of assets or benefits is unequal and unfair

Especially where relations are generally bad and other triggers of conflict exist

Where sectoral resources and assets provide tempting ‘soft’ targets for terrorists

B. Conflict and violence can damage sectoral factors of security and make it harder to apply

normal remedies for sectoral security challenges:

Conflict damages health, environment, infrastructure etc

Conflicts and ‘weak state’ conditions make it hard to maintain energy supply, transport and IT systems, effective border and migration controls etc

Oppressive or unsafe internal security conditions will distort distribution of benefits and are likely to involve health damage, over-exploitation of resources etc

Too much ‘militarization’ or ‘securitization’ of society can also divert resources from other important sectoral dimensions and cause assets to be hoarded/over-exploited

FINALLY: SECTORAL DIMENSIONS ARE INTER-LINKED

Distinguish between:

  1. Intrinsic or organic links eg

Health is directly linked to environment

Infrastructure and communications rely on energy supplies

Environment is affected by energy use

  1. Ad hoc links eg

A natural disaster breaks an energy supply line

A terrorist attack releases a bio-agent that causes a health crisis

Chernobyl damages health, infrastructure and communications

SARS disrupts air and sea transport

NB that chains of consequences (‘domino effects’) often have multiple elements eg

A terrorist bio-attack damages health but also forces areas to be sealed off, disrupting communications and perhaps water, energy and food supplies

The wrong kind of climate change affects environment, infrastructure and health and may demand major changes in energy use