scholarly journals Rethinking the Protection of Vulnerable Groups in the Pandemic Situation (SARS-COVID 19): The Necessity to Implement the HRA and Human Security Framework into the Healthcare Professionals and Caregivers

2020 ◽  
Vol XXIII (Special Issue 2) ◽  
pp. 220-225
Author(s):  
Daria Bienkowska ◽  
Ryszard Kozlowski ◽  
Mikolaj
2013 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 174-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Macpherson ◽  
Frederick M. Burkle

AbstractThe lack of attention to basic safety and security standards by the humanitarian community is endemic. The tragic bombing and loss of life of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Iraq in 2003 is but one of many unfortunate examples; these incidents are increasing in number. Tools for establishing an organizational security framework are readily available. Capacity to implement this framework requires understanding the culture of safety and security and individual and organizational leadership. This report outlines the essential steps and components necessary to meet this requirement.MacphersonR, Burkle FM Jr. Neglect and failures of human security in humanitarian settings: challenges and recommendations. Prehosp Disaster Med. 2013;28(2):1-5.


2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Awino Okech

This paper focuses on contemporary challenges to the human security framework through an examination of asymmetrical conflict generated by extremist insurgents, specifically Al Shabaab in Kenya. The political and security dynamics generated by extremist groups often find reinforcement in local contestations over power and territory, resulting in an interaction between local and 'external'. It is the product of these interactions in the form of opportunities, resultant discourses, responses and what they offer to an expansion of normative ideas about human security and conflict that this paper focuses on. Using Kenya as a case study, this paper explores the interface between the growth of Al Shabaab, securitisation of governance and political elite consensus on the policy relationship between human security versus a state security model. This paper pursues the argument that the rise in the intensity and nature of Al Shabaab attacks in Kenya has influenced the interpretation of the country's security  threats and the application of strategies. Rather than aiding the application of human security as central to national security, it has rolled back previous gains.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 227-232
Author(s):  
Almas Sultana ◽  

As the entire nation is battling against covid-19, millions of us are experiencing high level of stress and it is damaging our health as stress is one of the great public health challenges in this time. Stress is a natural physical and mental reaction to life experiences. Anything from everyday responsibilities like work and family to serious life events such as illness, accident, pandemic or death of a loved one can trigger stress. Healthcare professionals and migrant workers are among the most vulnerable groups at risk of stress, anxiety and depression. The present paper focuses on the stress issues during Covid-19 outbreak for healthcare professionals and migrant workers. The paper also gives suggestive measures for coping with stress in the current scenario. Individually, we need to understand what is causing us stress and learn what steps we can take to reduce it for ourselves and those around us.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Yawson ◽  
Ivy Johnson-Kanda

Complex Adaptive Leadership offers ways to shift the focus of practice to one that reflects, embraces multiple points of view, and changes in response to new knowledge and data. From a societal perspective, complex adaptive leadership provides organizations with the opportunity to grapple with the most significant and persistent problems of our time and potentially achieve real change. The paper explores complexity theory in more detail and its influence on social systems using gender bias and terrorism as examples. Using the Human Security Framework as a complex adaptive leadership approach in addressing Wicked Problems, this paper describes the Human Security dimensions to understand the wicked problems in which 21st-century organizations grapple with and the type of organizational leadership needed to confront these challenges.


2021 ◽  
Vol 03 (02) ◽  
pp. 68-77
Author(s):  
Fouzia ZAAMOUCHE

The phenomenon of climate asylum has been a global concern in recent years due to the acceleration and exacerbation of its spread and the shortcoming of the international legal process, this will lead to a real threat to the stability of global human security, as the emergence of this phenomenon has produced the so-called climate refugee as one of the most vulnerable groups among the victims of natural disasters who are forced to leave and abandon their place of residence this is because they live under the pressure of many climate changes. Therefor, the importance of the topic is reflected in the fact that it is a new and important topic of contemporary international public law, which is researched in trying to frame the phenomenon of climate asylum especially in light of the difficulty of controlling the necessity of the factors created for it time and place, and the purpose of dealing with this topic remain an attempt to remove some am issue in the form of a jurisprudential root and as a special international practice from a legal point of view in line with the above, the subject of the articole will focus the scientific effort. To look into the problem: the shortcomings build international legal foundations to seek the integration of climate refuges into the Geneva convention 1951 to benefit from international protection , it will inevitably load to imbalance in ensuring the stability of global human security and the threat to the entire human existence.


2009 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 99-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Tanentzap ◽  
Dawn R. Bazely ◽  
Peter A. Williams ◽  
Gunhild Hoogensen

AbstractFew individuals or governments have suggested that invasions by nonindigenous species are relevant to the broader issue of human security, despite a growing awareness of the ecological, economic, and societal impacts associated with invasive nonindigenous species (INIS). We propose that by framing management actions in a human and environmental security context, the threats (and benefits) posed by INIS to individuals and communities can be explicitly articulated and debated. This framework allows multiple stakeholders to bring their concerns to bear upon specific policy, and attempts to integrate broad environmental concerns within its parameters. We use the case of ecosystem-based management of invasive nonindigenous plants as an example of the utility of a human security framework. The dominant management approach to these species remains focused on the individual species, despite increasing calls for the implementation of ecosystem-based management strategies. Ecosystem-based management is supported by generalized and widely accepted mechanisms of plant community dynamics, such as succession, disturbance, and interspecific competition, but these scientific arguments do not consistently carry weight at the policy level and with the broader public. A human security framework may provide an approach for overcoming this resistance by placing the debate over management within the social and political context of the wider community. Overall, human security can allow applied ecologists to be better positioned to meet the challenges of communicating the need for science-based management.


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