The Definition of Security
A Broader Definition of Security in Post-2014
Afghanistan
U.S. Marines lower their flag during a
handover ceremony, as the last U.S. Marines unit and British combat troops end
their Afghan operations, in Helmand, Afghanistan, October 26, 2014 (Courtesy
Reuters/Omar Sobhani ).
Earlier this month, the United
States and NATO lowered the flags over their mission in Kabul in the first of two ceremonies
that mark the end of the international combat mission in Afghanistan. Over the
next few weeks, foreign troops in Afghanistan will be transitioning to a
training and support role.
To discuss the future of Afghan security and the
Afghan people—particularly women and girls—after this momentous event, I hosted
a roundtable with Dr. Barnett Rubin, director
and senior fellow at New York University’s Center on International Cooperation,
and Rina Amiri, a senior mediator at the United Nations. Our conversation
focused on how stability in Afghanistan is not only relevant to U.S. national
security interests, but also critical for the future opportunities, prosperity,
and rights of Afghan women. In order for Afghan women to be part of the public
sphere, including working outside the home or attending school,stability
and security on the ground is paramount.
Yet the
traditional definition of security—in this context, one that focuses solely on
the presence of foreign troops or the readiness of the Afghan security forces—is
insufficient to understand the needs of Afghan women and girls after 2014.
Establishing an environment where Afghan women can thrive requires the United
States to embrace a wider definition of security that includes economic
security, human security, and inclusive security.
Since at least the Cold War, policymakers have come to
realize that economic strength contributes equally, if not more, than strategic
position and political influence to the establishment of lasting stability and
security. As such, economic security is especially critical in
peacebuilding and postconflict reconstruction. Mass poverty and lack of
economic opportunity allow extremism to flourish; encouraging economic growth,
therefore, can help prevent future outbreaks of conflict.
The participation of women in the economy is an
important element of generating growth and thus of economic security. Not only
is women’s economic inclusion critical for their own empowerment, but it also
correlates with better economic and social outcomes. When women earn money,
they pay their incomes forward into their communities, families, and children,reinvesting
90 percent of it. Moreover, girls with higher levels of education marry later, have
smaller families, and experience reduced incidences of HIV/AIDS, minimizing the potential for
poverty for their children. A child whose mother can read is 50 percent more
likely to survive past the age of five, and each extra year of a mother’s
schooling reduces the probability of an infant dying by 5 percent to 10
percent. Thus, educating mothers is an essential investment in the next
generation, with economic and social benefits that have cumulative consequences
for stability.
In the past
two decades, the definition of security has broadened even further.
Human security, as defined by the
1994 UN Human Development Report, is the “protection from the threat
of disease, hunger, unemployment, crime, social conflict, political repression,
and environmental hazards.” Again, focusing on the personal safety of
individuals and families limits the probability of violence and extremism
taking hold. The minimization of these ills—especially disease, crime, and
environmental hazards—is critical for the mobility of women.
Without public safety, women’s access to school,
employment, and more outside the home is greatly decreased, thus limiting their
opportunities for empowerment and advancement.
More recently, the security definition has expanded to
include inclusive security, referring to a “diverse, citizen-driven
approach to global stability,” as defined by Swanee Hunt in a 2001 Foreign Policy article. Hunt’s security framework
emphasizes women’s agency, rather than their vulnerability, and argues that
women play a critical role in establishing lasting peace.
Women are often at the center of popular protest
movements and civil society groups, making their participation in postconflict
negotiations and other political processes invaluable.
As these
factors become accepted as critical to security in the twenty-first century,
the United States and NATO should seek to support Afghans as they establish
this fullest sense of security in Afghanistan. Embracing this multifaceted
definition of security and furthering women’s empowerment will then pay further
dividends: ensuring more long-lasting stability and a more secure future for
all.
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