Human security was a dominant theme of Canadian foreign policy during the tenure of Foreign Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy, who made it a focal point of Canada's term on the UN Security Council (1999 - 2000). The equality of individuals that is implicit in human security requires that its benefits, not least of which is the right to life free from violence, be extended to all, a doctrine which was expounded by many Western leaders as a new guiding principle in the wake of the NATO intervention in Kosovo. This principle was tested only months later when a UN-administered referendum in East Timor resulted in the overwhelming ratification of independence by voters, followed by a wave of violence perpetrated by anti-independence groups with th...
Human security was promoted in 1994 by the UNDP as a concept embracing not only freedom from war and...
Note:This expository appraisal of human rights orientation in Canadian foreign policy is predicated ...
This article begins by describing how Canada’s current commitments to the United Nations are located...
In the late 1990s, human security was promoted as a new idea to guide the formation of Canadian fore...
Canada has embarked on a new approach to security in the post-Cold War era. Through its Minister for...
Since the introduction of the concept of human security in 1994, debates have raged regarding the de...
The multitude of changes on the international scene during the 1990’s had a major impact on thinking...
Belief in human rights is a value central to the Canadian self-image. Canadians view the developmen...
The events of 11 September 2001 propelled the issue of global terrorism to the top of the internatio...
'Human security' is a promising but still underdeveloped paradigmatic approach to understanding cont...
Failed and fragile states that result from intrastate war pose severe threats to the security of bo...
This thesis aims to answer the questions on why Canada using human security in its involvement in Af...
This paper will examine the prima facie case that Canadian policy and practice in Afghanistan have n...
During its 1999-2000 term on the United Nations Security Council, Canada helped launch the Council’s...
Written by diplomatic practitioners, Human Security and the New Diplomacy is a straightforward accou...
Human security was promoted in 1994 by the UNDP as a concept embracing not only freedom from war and...
Note:This expository appraisal of human rights orientation in Canadian foreign policy is predicated ...
This article begins by describing how Canada’s current commitments to the United Nations are located...
In the late 1990s, human security was promoted as a new idea to guide the formation of Canadian fore...
Canada has embarked on a new approach to security in the post-Cold War era. Through its Minister for...
Since the introduction of the concept of human security in 1994, debates have raged regarding the de...
The multitude of changes on the international scene during the 1990’s had a major impact on thinking...
Belief in human rights is a value central to the Canadian self-image. Canadians view the developmen...
The events of 11 September 2001 propelled the issue of global terrorism to the top of the internatio...
'Human security' is a promising but still underdeveloped paradigmatic approach to understanding cont...
Failed and fragile states that result from intrastate war pose severe threats to the security of bo...
This thesis aims to answer the questions on why Canada using human security in its involvement in Af...
This paper will examine the prima facie case that Canadian policy and practice in Afghanistan have n...
During its 1999-2000 term on the United Nations Security Council, Canada helped launch the Council’s...
Written by diplomatic practitioners, Human Security and the New Diplomacy is a straightforward accou...
Human security was promoted in 1994 by the UNDP as a concept embracing not only freedom from war and...
Note:This expository appraisal of human rights orientation in Canadian foreign policy is predicated ...
This article begins by describing how Canada’s current commitments to the United Nations are located...