Beyond Realism: Human Security in India and Pakistan in the Twenty-First Century

Beyond Realism: Human Security in India and Pakistan in the Twenty-First Century

by Rekha Datta, Paul Rich
ISBN-10:
0739121545
ISBN-13:
9780739121542
Pub. Date:
02/15/2008
Publisher:
Lexington Books
ISBN-10:
0739121545
ISBN-13:
9780739121542
Pub. Date:
02/15/2008
Publisher:
Lexington Books
Beyond Realism: Human Security in India and Pakistan in the Twenty-First Century

Beyond Realism: Human Security in India and Pakistan in the Twenty-First Century

by Rekha Datta, Paul Rich
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Overview

As the world is changing, many scholars, analysts, and policy makers agree that even as governments need to confront external threats, creating sustainable domestic environments is imperative as a policy priority. As events surrounding September 11, 2001 continue to remind us, marginalized sections of the population can become breeding grounds for dissatisfaction, disenchantment, and eventually, targets for terrorist groups.
Throughout the cold war period, South Asia served as a strategic region in the bilateral rivalry between the United States and the former Soviet Union, coupled with China's careful scrutiny. In the post cold war period, several bilateral conflicts, the nuclear tests of 1998, the post 9/11 world in which South Asia has become a breeding ground for terrorists, entwined with an embattled, albeit a shared history, continue to make India and Pakistan a pivotal region to study.
A timely analysis which starts with traditional approaches and combines them with new thinking within a human security policy framework, this book will contribute to a deeper and more holistic understanding of policy priorities of major players in a pivotal region of the world. It begins by analyzing security policies of India and Pakistan that have emerged in the context of geo-political concerns based on realist calculations. It also looks at the policies of the two governments in key areas such as the economy, education, public health, and safeguarding against gender-based violence. Concern with human security prompts analyses such as the one adopted in this book to argue that governments should empower and protect their citizens from serious threats to their survival. Home to a fifth of the world's population, large numbers of whom are reeling in poverty, where terrorism continues to be a concern, along with ongoing border disputes, India and Pakistan will find it imperative to make careful evaluations of this multipronged challenge to security. While it has relevance for regional policy priorities, this analys

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739121542
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 02/15/2008
Series: Studies in Public Policy
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 172
Product dimensions: 6.35(w) x 9.48(h) x 0.68(d)

About the Author

Rekha Datta is associate professor and chair of political science at Monmouth University.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Table of Contents
Chapter 2 Acknowledgments
Chapter 3 Foreword
Chapter 4 1 Through the Looking Glass: Security Imperatives in India and Pakistan
Chapter 5 2 From State Security to Human Security: Bringing the State Back In
Chapter 6 3 The Kashmir Quagmire
Chapter 7 4 The Nuclear Nexus
Chapter 8 5 Beyond War to Making Money
Chapter 9 6 Human Security, Millennium Development Goals, and Education
Chapter 10 7 Public Health and Human Security
Chapter 11 8 Security Through Dignity: Addressing Violence Against Women
Chapter 12 9 Conclusion: Toward a New Paradigm—Will Human Security Guarantee Safety?
Chapter 13 Bibliography
Chapter 14 About the Author

What People are Saying About This

Sumit Ganguly

Rekha Datta's book is an important, theoretically grounded and empirically rich attempt to deal with the nascent concept of human security in India and Pakistan. Even those who work outside this emergent area of international relations will find this book to be thoughtful and provocative.

Ramesh Thakur

Human security is a powerful analytical lens through which to frame the security needs of citizens independently of the military threats to one country from another. India and Pakistan represent a mere one-hundredth of the number of countries in the system of states today. Yet their people comprise one-sixth of the world’s total population, a truer indication of their weight in world affairs. Human security, in addition to enabling us to frame threats differently and more realistically in terms of the daily lives of human beings, also provides a different and more people-friendly policy template for the authoritative allocation of scarce resources. It is a strength of Dr. Datta’s book that, even while delinking security from the state and attaching it to people instead, she highlights the importance of the state in ensuring human security through public policy choices.

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