Human security and the rise of the social
AbstractAs the concept of human security has become part of the mainstream discourse of international politics it should be no surprise that both realist and critical approaches to international theory have found the agenda wanting. This article seeks to go beyond both the realist and biopolitical critiques by situating all three – political realism, biopolitics and human security – within the history and theory of the modernrise of the socialrealm from late eighteenth and nineteenth century Europe. Human security is the further expansion ofsocialforms of governance under capitalism, more specifically a form ofsocialpolitikthanrealpolitikor biopolitics. Drawing on the work of historical sociologist Robert Castel and political theorist Hannah Arendt, the article develops an alternative framework with which to question the extent to which ‘life’ has become the subject of global intervention through the human security agenda.