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POL 100 International and Domestic Security
Lecture 26
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Domestic Security vs. International Security: Revision of key concepts
Defining domestic and international security-linked to ideas of sovereignty (internal sovereignty of the state + external sovereignty of the state) Anarchy in international relations Globalization and security Civil liberties during times of war
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1. Domestic Security The professional standing police force: comes to exist with the social unrest and rise in criminality following the industrial revolution More aware of and more responsive to societal norms and conditions-it is well integrated into the society as compared to an army (SSR in Pakistan e.g. NAP etc. ) Liberal-conservative (derived from opinions about human nature) and radical views of the police (derived from structural biases in society)
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What does the police do? Civil Policing: The police exists to fight crime. Rural-Urban divide. Small towns have a greater possibility of “self-policing” A correlation between how police organization and tactics have adapted to increasingly thinly connected and divided (socially and culturally) urban societies Community Policing: Building trust and cooperation with the public. Officers regularly visit families and workplaces within their jurisdiction The Broken Windows Theory (deterrence and the snowball effect) Police States: when the police can operate outside the legal framework in practical terms (not accountable to public or courts)
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Civil-Military Relations
The military is a political institution of a very particular kind; i) an instrument of war ii) organized and disciplined iii) Professionalization (neutrality) iv) Guardians of “national interest” outside/above politics * They role played by the professionalization and neutrality of the army – case studies Egypt vs. Syria 2011 and beyond
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2. International Security
Realism and Liberalism in International Relations Main/common tenants of realism; Self-help, Survival (National Security), Statism, Anarchy
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Evolution of Realist thought
Classical Realism Structural Realism: i) Offensive Realism ii) Defensive Realism Neo-realism These follow a chronological order with regard to the development of realist thought in IR Importance of thinking about theories in a historical context
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New conceptions of security
New wars vs. old wars Human Security Debating terrorism Regional Security Complex (RSCTs)
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