The paper describes the introduction of an emphasis on 'personal security' in human security thinking and practice, as part of the ultimately unsuccessful attempt to compartmentalize the pursuit of security. It reviews the past twenty years of attention to 'personal security': both in compartments that consider organized physical violence or threats to personal safety and property ('citizen security'), and as parts of more wide-ranging examination of threats to fulfilment of basic needs and rights, for example in comprehensive mapping exercises undertaken in various UNDP Regional and National Human Development Reports or in studies of women's security. The paper reflects on the complex process of opening-up conventional security thinking and practice, seeking value-added and depth without shrinking into preconceived compartments.Keywords: human security, personal security, citizen security, gender violence, Human Development Reports
The evolution of a boundary concept: the limits of compartmentalizationHuman security analysis looks at threats to fulfilment of basic values in people's lives. It seeks to reorient use of the prioritizing concept 'security', towards securing basic needs of ordinary people. So it answers the question 'whose security?' with: 'each of us and all of us'.In addressing next the question 'security of what?', some forms of human security analysis have adopted compartmentalization, trying to separately discuss 'personal security', 'economic security', 'environmental security' and so on. This can be helpful, and fits established bureaucratic and disciplinary convenience. It is also often unhelpful. Many important threats arise out of the interconnections between different aspects and forces in particular situations, so that much of the value-added from human security analysis comes not from putting a new name on topics already considered under existing bureaucratic and 2 disciplinary arrangements but from functioning as a boundary concept to transcend those divisions, flexibly according to the nature of particular situations. A focus on how people live and can live, and the function of looking at priority values and priority threats, require a transdisciplinary holistic perspective, at least periodically, in order to see linkages and to draw comparisons across 'sectors' to try to ensure priority attention to the threats most relevant in the given time and place.We examine these themes with special reference to 'personal security', a prominent-and some argue pre-eminently important-area in human security policy and research, that stands in contrast to the predominant fields of policy attention in the 20 th century: national state security and economic growth. We touch on three major (overlapping) sub-areas of work:-violence against civilians, during wars, civil wars and other armed conflict; crime against civilians; and violence against women, during peace as well as war, considered as part of broader examination of threats and forms of marginalization affecting women.Section 2 explain...