2013
DOI: 10.1057/9781137293657
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The Protection and Promotion of Human Security in East Asia

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Cited by 26 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Despite perhaps less than completely altruistic motivations, given the humanitarian policy areas identified for national diplomatic focus, there is tremendous potential for others in the region to be aided by Korean initiatives and agenda-setting. Perhaps this could be termed "collateral benefit" or a happy coincidence of national interest of the middle power actor and the needs of vulnerable individuals and groups, as well as the wider regional security and development operating environment (Howe 2013). Indeed, because it is in the ROK's national interest to help others, they may be more committed to doing so.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite perhaps less than completely altruistic motivations, given the humanitarian policy areas identified for national diplomatic focus, there is tremendous potential for others in the region to be aided by Korean initiatives and agenda-setting. Perhaps this could be termed "collateral benefit" or a happy coincidence of national interest of the middle power actor and the needs of vulnerable individuals and groups, as well as the wider regional security and development operating environment (Howe 2013). Indeed, because it is in the ROK's national interest to help others, they may be more committed to doing so.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 20 The limitation of human security as a category of research ( Paris 2001 ) has not affected the proliferation of human security studies. In the Asian context, the narrow-broad debate has catalyzed a multitude of conceptual and empirical research ranging from the narrow realm of freedom from fear topics such as the adoptability of R2P by Bellamy and Drummond (2011) to the broad investigation of freedom from want issues and the challenges of mainstreaming human security at national and regional levels as represented by the works of Nishikawa (2010) , Hernandez and Kraft (2012) , Teh (2012) , Howe (2013) and Mine, Gomez, and Muto (2019) . Freedom from want issues such as poverty, natural disasters, health outbreaks, migration, food safety, drug smuggling, and human trafficking are central concerns of many developing Asian countries and because of their more receptive outlook compared to humanitarian intervention may explain the interests and research tendencies of Asian scholars.…”
Section: Footnotesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But there is tension between the two, and state violence at the expense of human security is likely to continue until this is reconciled. True, emphasis on "freedom from want," through "good governance" supports the role of a strong state (Howe 2013). However, rather than principle or development theory, what matters more is the benefit Northeast Asian officials see accruing to their state and its citizens through provisioning friendly support to Southeast Asian governments.…”
Section: Notes Southeastmentioning
confidence: 99%