HUMAN SECURITY IN SOUTH AFRICA

IF 0.3 Q4 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Sandy Africa
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

1. Introduction The gains that can be attributed to the cause of human security since the end of apartheid are significant. The right to vote, to basic education and primary health care; the introduction of an extensive social security system that has lifted many people out of poverty; the provision of affordable housing and basic services to millions, are some of the undeniable achievements of 21 years of democracy. On the regional and international fronts, South Africa has shifted from being a source of insecurity to its neighbours to being an advocate for peace on the continent, playing a prominent mediation role in conflicts such as those in Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and the Sudan. Yet the country remains dogged by unemployment and poverty, structural inequality in the economy, the failure of some state institutions to provide adequately for the needs of all people, and failures in the criminal justice system, to name several challenges. Moreover, South Africa's formal Pan-Africanist and internationalist posture has been sullied by recurring instances of violent attacks on migrants, many of whom have fled hardship in their own countries. It could be argued that human security has not prevailed, and might even be a waning value in the South African political and social fabric. Are we in fact, seeing a reversal of gains, and the return of the traditional security approach that had characterised the apartheid years? This commentary asks whether the human security agenda has been lost in the quagmire of political, economic and social challenges confronting South Africa, and if this is the case, what can be done to arrest the trend. 2. Africa's contribution to the global discourse on human security In the global discourse, 'human security' gained currency at a particular geo-political moment, soon after the end of the Cold War. At the time, South Africa's political transition was already underway, and ideas about what should replace the state-centred notion of apartheid, were an integral part of discussions. The poverty, racial discrimination, political repression and institutionalised violence that had characterised life for black people for centuries had been a focus of struggles and campaigns for decades. The state had clearly been a source of insecurity--this was conceded by the apartheid government during the negotiations in the early 1990s. The language in which discussions around a future security dispensation was framed, spoke resoundingly of a new era of 'freedom from fear' and 'freedom from want'--the language of human security. Whilst the United Nations' (UN) 1994 Human Development Report is often cited as a decisive moment in shifting the conceptual understanding of security, it was in fact part of a long continuum of global political thought and action. Anti-colonial struggles, the establishment of the UN, the international struggle against apartheid, all contained within them a desire to rid the world of physical violence and to establish inclusive, human and just societies. Not only were these aspirations expressed in the struggles fought by many peoples and movements, they also found expression in academic analyses." (1) Even before the 1994 UN Report, the relationship between security and development was captured in the seminal 1991 Kampala Document, which emanated from a meeting convened by the chairperson of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), President Yoweri Musoveni and Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria, who was then chairperson of the Africa Leadership Forum (Africa Leadership Forum 1991: 4). The meeting, attended by over 500 people including several serving and former heads of state, deliberated on the prospects for Africa in the 1990s and the 21st century. It proposed the launch of a Conference on Security, Stability, Development and Cooperation in Africa (CSSDCA). It argued that the erosion of insecurity and instability were major impediments to economic integration and the socio-economic transformation of Africa. …
南非的人类安全
1.引言自种族隔离结束以来,人类安全事业所取得的成果是巨大的。选举权、基础教育权和初级保健权;实行广泛的社会保障制度,使许多人摆脱了贫困;向数百万人提供负担得起的住房和基本服务,是21年民主取得的一些不可否认的成就。在区域和国际方面,南非已从邻国的不安全根源转变为非洲大陆和平的倡导者,在布隆迪、刚果民主共和国和苏丹等冲突中发挥了重要的调解作用。然而,该国仍然受到失业和贫困、经济结构不平等、一些国家机构未能充分满足所有人的需求以及刑事司法系统的失败等诸多挑战的困扰。此外,南非正式的泛非主义和国际主义姿态因一再发生的针对移民的暴力袭击事件而受到玷污,其中许多人逃离了自己国家的苦难。可以说,人类安全并没有占上风,甚至可能是南非政治和社会结构中价值的下降。事实上,我们是否看到了成果的逆转,以及种族隔离时代特有的传统安全方法的回归?这篇评论询问,人类安全议程是否在南非面临的政治、经济和社会挑战的泥潭中迷失了方向,如果是这样,该如何遏制这一趋势。2.非洲对人类安全全球话语的贡献在全球话语中,“人类安全”在冷战结束后不久的特定地缘政治时刻流行起来。当时,南非的政治过渡已经在进行中,关于什么应该取代以国家为中心的种族隔离概念的想法是讨论的组成部分。几个世纪以来,黑人生活中的贫困、种族歧视、政治镇压和制度化暴力一直是几十年来斗争和运动的焦点。该州显然是不安全的根源——种族隔离政府在20世纪90年代初的谈判中承认了这一点。围绕未来安全分配进行讨论的语言,响亮地讲述了一个“免于恐惧”和“免于匮乏”的新时代——人类安全的语言。虽然《联合国1994年人类发展报告》经常被认为是改变对安全概念理解的决定性时刻,但事实上,它是全球政治思想和行动长期连续性的一部分。反殖民斗争、联合国的成立、反对种族隔离的国际斗争,都包含着一种愿望,即消除世界上的人身暴力,建立包容、人性和公正的社会。这些愿望不仅在许多民族和运动的斗争中得到了表达,而且在学术分析中也得到了表达。“(1)甚至在1994年《联合国报告》之前,安全与发展之间的关系就已经在1991年具有开创性意义的《坎帕拉文件》中得到了阐述,该文件源于非洲统一组织(非统组织)主席约韦里·穆索韦尼总统和时任非洲领导人论坛主席的尼日利亚的奥卢塞贡·奥巴桑乔召开的一次会议(非洲领导人论坛1991:4)会议有500多人参加,其中包括几位现任和前任国家元首,讨论了非洲在20世纪90年代和21世纪的前景。它提议召开一次非洲安全、稳定、发展与合作会议。它认为,不安全和不稳定的侵蚀是非洲经济一体化和社会经济转型的主要障碍…
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