Journal of Human Security

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Volume 17, Issue 1 (2021)

Sabina Lautensach
University of Northern British Columbia, Terrace, BC, V8G 4A2, Canada

A retrospective on the year 2020 suggests that the CoViD-19 pandemic can and should be interpreted as a multidimensional learning opportunity.

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Arry Bainus
Padjadjaran University, Sumedang, Indonesia Wawan Budi Darmawan
Padjadjaran University, Sumedang, Indonesia Dina Yulianti
Padjadjaran University, Sumedang, Indonesia Luthfi Hamzah Husin
Padjadjaran University, Sumedang, Indonesia

This article offers an empirical finding of human security issues in Citarum River, Indonesia, which was once labelled as the dirtiest and most polluted river in the world. Using a theoretical framework based on actor-based security.

John Morrissey
National University of Ireland, Galway, Republic of Ireland

COVID-19 has elevated anew the import of holistically conceiving human-environmental well[1]being and tackling the overarching precarities of our ecologies, societies and public health in strategies of securitization. This paper con.

Ardli Johan Kusuma
Department of Political Science, Universitas Pembangunan Nasional Veteran Jakarta, Jakarta, Indonesia Firman Firman
Department of Public Administration, Universitas 17 Agustus 1945 Jakarta, Jakarta, Indonesia Ahmad Harakan
Department of Government Studies, Universitas Muhammadiyah Makassar, Makassar, Indonesia M. Chairil Akbar Setiawan
Department of International Relations, Universitas Pembangunan Nasional Veteran Jakarta, Jakarta, Indonesia Dodi Faedlulloh
Department of Public Administration, Universitas Lampung, Bandar Lampung, Indonesia Komang Jaka Ferdian
Department of Political Science, Universitas Bangka Belitung, Bangka Belitung, Indonesia

The present study discusses the role of NGOs in the efforts of the Indonesian Humanitarian Alliance for Myanmar (AKIM: Aliansi Kemanusian Indonesia Untuk Myanmar) to handle the humanitarian crisis experienced by Ethnic Rohingya grou.

Dorota Domalewska
Faculty of National Security, War Studies University, Warsaw, Poland Małgorzata Gawlik Kobylinska´
Faculty of Management and Command, War Studies University, Warsaw, Poland Phuong Hoang Yen
Department of English Language and Culture, Can Tho University, Can Tho Rebecca K. Webb
Faculty of Liberal Arts, Rangsit University, Rangsit, Thailand Nakonthep Thiparasuparat
Faculty of Liberal Arts, Rangsit University, Rangsit, Thailand

Safe space describes a classroom climate that feels secure, supportive, and risk-free so that students can honestly express their individuality and opinions without fear of being the target of violence, harassment, or hate speech. I.

Marta Sara Stempien
Institute of Security Studies, Siedlce University of Natural Sciences and Humanities, Siedlce, Poland

The article analyses a large content of the English-language magazines Dabiq and Rumiyah. They provide a significant amount of content for research on the role of women (mostly Western) in jihadi terrorism. The author attempts to un.

Brandy Cochrane
College of Law and Justice, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia Lotte Wolff
College of Law and Justice, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia

This paper explores the everyday security of refugee and asylum-seeking mothers before, during and after irregular migration. Based on narrative interviews with mothers residing in Melbourne, we analyse how their needs both do and d.

Anna Magdalena Kosinska
Department of International and European Union Law, John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Lublin, Poland

The aim of the article is to analyze the changes introduced recently (2018–2019) in the national migration law of the selected Member States: Italy, Poland and Germany and to examine whether there exist guarantees of the right to .

Edyta Bombiak
Institute of Management and Quality Sciences, Siedlce University of Natural Sciences and Humanities, Siedlce, Poland

Security issues and human lives have always been inseparable. The feeling of security is the basic need of every individual. The outbreak of the pandemic has had major consequences for the operation of enterprises and their employee.

Theresa A. Ammann
Department of Anthropology, Aarhus University, Højbjerg, Denmark Tamara A. Kool
Maastricht Graduate School of Governance, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands

While many have argued for Human Security to integrate a gendered perspective, there is a lack of a consistent approach which hampers the transformative potential that otherwise could be achieved. To better understand how gender has.

Editor-in-Chief

Dr. Sabina Lautensach
Human Security Institute, Canada