Human (in)security and democracy in Central America
Date published
2015-10-09
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Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Department
Type
Article
ISSN
1741-9166
Format
Citation
O'Brien T, Human (in)security and democracy in Central America, Democracy and Security, Volume 11, Issue 1, 2015, pages 44-59
Abstract
Human security has increasingly shifted attention to the individual, while the state has become guarantor (or violator) of security given its role in governing the domestic environment. This article examines how variations in regime forms influence security, pointing to the importance of political security in the wider human security framework. To illustrate, the article examines the nature of political security in Central America, a region with weakly democratized states and histories of political violence. The findings suggest a link between democracy and human security that is mediated by state capacity and the ability to control non-state violence against individuals.
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Keywords
Authoritarian, Contentious Politics, Political Violence, State Capacity
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Attribution-Non-Commercial 3.0 Unported