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The Dangers of the United Nations' “New Security Agenda”: “Human Security” in the Asia-Pacific Region

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2015

Ben Saul*
Affiliation:
University of NSW, Australia

Abstract

Amidst the understandable enthusiasm for enlarging the traditional state-centred view of security and embracing a “human security” agenda, little scholarly attention has been paid to the implications of this shift for international law. This article first charts the scope and genesis of “human security,” including within the United Nations and in the Asia-Pacific region, and traces the views of key Asian governments on the concept. It then analyses the relationship between human security and human rights and highlights the likely adverse impacts on human rights law. The remainder of the article considers how the human security agenda may destabilize the constitutional distribution of powers among UN organs under the UN Charter, especially by transferring power away from the more participatory General Assembly and towards the less representative and less accountable Security Council. In line with the position of some Asian States, this article reasserts that UN organs other than the Security Council, along with other major international institutions, are the appropriate bodies within which to pursue and address human security issues. In particular, the General Assembly and the Economic and Social Council require revitalization to avoid the trap of securitizing issues that are better framed as developmental and social concerns.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Faculty of Law, National University of Singapore 2006

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173 Ibid, 6.

174 Ibid, 7.

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188 Ibid, 226-242.

189 Gowlland-Debbas, supra note 115, 286, 311.

190 Koskenniemi, M, “The Police in the Temple: Order, Justice and the UN: A Dialectical View” (1995) 6 E.J.I.L. 325, 344 Google Scholar.

191 Szasz, supra note 125, 905.

192 Kelsen, supra note 114, 199.

193 Simma, supra note 109, 838.

194 Szasz, supra note 125, 905.

195 UNGA (59th Session), Statement by Chinese Permanent Representative Wang Guangya on the Report of the High-level Panel, Informal Consultations, 22 February 2005.

196 Ibid.

197 Chinese Position Paper, supra note 42.

198 Statement by Permanent Representative Wang Guangya, n195.

199 Stiglitz, J, Globalisation and its Discontents (Penguin, London, 2002), 1011 Google Scholar.

200 See also Busumtwi-Sam, supra note 2, 256-257.

201 Tay and Tan Hsien Li, supra note 57, 414.

202 UNGA (60th Session), Statement by the Indian External Affairs Minister, Shri K Natwar Singh, New York, 19 September 2005.

203 Milanovic, B, “Why Did the Poorest Countries Fail to Catch Up?”, Carnegie Papers: Trade, Equity and Development Project, No 62, November 2005, 3 Google Scholar.

204 Koskenniemi, supra note 190, 328, 335; Gowlland-Debbas, supra note 115, 287.

205 Koskenniemi, ibid, 342.

206 See, eg, ibid, 344-346; Reisman, supra note 117, 85-86; but see Talmon's critique of critics of the Council's secrecy and lack of representativeness: Talmon, S, “The Security Council as World Legislature” (2005) 99 Am. J. Intl. L. 175 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

207 Koskenniemi, ibid, 339.

208 Caron, D, “The Legitimacy of the Collective Authority of the Security Council” (1993) 87 Am. J. Intl. L. 552, 560 Google Scholar.

209 Türk, supra note 170, 53; Szasz, supra note 125, 905; see also Dean, J, “Expanding the Security Council Role in Blocking the Spread of Nuclear Weapons” (1992) 2 Transnational L & Contemporary Problems 587 Google Scholar.

210 Gowlland-Debbas, supra note 115, 312.

211 World Summit, supra note 31, at paras. 138-140; see also Report of the Independent Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty, The Responsibility to Protect (2003), available at www.iciss.ca/pdf/Commission-Report.pdf (6 December 2005).

212 G Evans, “The United Nations: Vision, Reality and Reform”, Address to Australian Fabian Society, Melbourne, 28 September 2005.

213 Ibid.

214 World Summit, supra note 31, at para. 149.

215 Ibid, at para. 150.

216 Ibid, at paras. 155-156.

217 Chinese Position Paper, supra note 42.

218 UNGA (60th Session), Vietnamese Foreign Minister Nguyen Dy Nien, “Vietnam tightens cooperation with international community for common goals”, 21 September 2005.

219 Vietnamese Ambassador Le Luong Minh, Permanent Representative to the UN informal meeting Concerning the Draft Outcome Document of the UNGA High-level Plenary Meeting, 1 July 2005.

220 UNGA (60th Session Plenary), Statement by the Hon Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, Prime Minister of Malaysia and Head of the Malaysian Delegation, New York, 14 September 2005.

221 See, eg, UNGA (60th Session Plenary), Statement by HE Dr Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, President of the Republic of Indonesia, New York, September 16, 2005.

222 Statement by Ambassador Gopala Menon of Singapore, supra note 51.

223 Vietnamese Ambassador Le Luong Minh, supra note 219.

224 Chinese Position Paper, supra note 42.

225 Chinese Position Paper, supra note 42.

226 Simma, supra note 109, 834, 857-9, 847-850.

227 See, eg Newman, supra note 1, 230-236.

227 See, eg Newman, supra note 1, 230-236.