Sabina Lautensach
1, 2, 3
|
1 Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Human Security, Librello, Basel, Switzerland |
2 Human Security Institute, Canada |
3 University of Northern British Columbia, Terrace, BC, V8G 4A2, Canada |
Dear Reader,
As the 21st century unfolds before us and humanity passed the eight-billion mark, global challange to human security are increasing in number and magnitude. The current coronavirus pandemic reminds us that the health- related pillar of human security plays no minor part in this escalation. The pandemic has followed first resport of a novel kind of pneumonia on 8 December 2019. From 31 December, when the outbreak was reported to the WHO, the epidemic was official. Current time courses of morbidity and mortality indicate that an inflection point has not yet been reached. According to a Lancet Global Health report [1], 45 204 cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) were confirmed as of 12 February, and 1116 deaths had been reported in twenty-five countries. More recently, the WHO [2] reported 77 923 cases in twenty-nine countries and 2361 deaths as of 22 February.
Annelie Holgersson
1
,
Annika Eklund
1, 2
,
Lina Gyllencreutz
1, *
and Britt-Inger Saveman
1
|
1 Department of Nursing, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden |
2 Division of Psychology, Pedagogy and Sociology, Section for nursing, University West, Trollhatten, Sweden |
* Corresponding author |
Anne Speckhard
1
,
Molly Ellenberg
1, *
,
Haider Shaghati
1
and Neima Izadi
1
|
1 The International Center for the Study of Violent Extremism, Washington, DC, USA |
* Corresponding author |
Cameron David Carlson
1, *
,
Troy J Bouffard
1
and Dana Woodward
1
|
1 Homeland Security and Emergency Management, University of Alaska Fairbanks, AK, USA |
* Corresponding author |
Radosław Korneć
|
Department of Social Sciences, Siedlce University of Natural Sciences and Humanities, Siedlce, Poland |
Paul Bellamy
|
New Zealand Parliamentary Service, Parliament, Wellington |
Colin David Butler
|
The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia |
This editorial presents a brief review of pandemics from antiquity to COVID-19. Although all large-scale epidemic diseases ("pandemics") can be considered ecological "checks" on human population size, and although COVID-19 is the biggest such pandemic since HIV/AIDS emerged it is not likely to approach the deathtoll of earlier pandemics, such as the plague. There are two major hypotheses to explain the origin of COVID-19. One is the "natural origin" hypothesis, the other is that it might have escaped from a laboratory, with its origin subsequently hidden. Although most scientists support the natural origin idea the other cannot yet be dismissed. Evidence for each hypothesis is presented. If the first theory is correct then it is a powerful warning, from nature, that our species is running a great risk. If the second theory is proven then it should be considered an equally powerful, indeed frightening, signal that we are in danger, from hubris as much as from ignorance. More pandemics are inevitable, but their severity can be reduced by greater transparency, international co-operation, and retreat from planetary boundaries.
Stanislaw Jarmoszko
|
Department of Social Sciences, Siedlce University of Natural Sciences and Humanities, Siedlce, Poland |
The article outlines the substantial frames of the anthropology of security as an independent anthropological (humanistic) sub-discipline and the anthropological approach to security. The multidisci- plinary character of sources of the anthropological knowledge makes the anthropology of security a field of integration of biological and socio-humanistic facets of the knowledge of security aspects. The focus of the discipline is the entirety of human dispositions and accomplishments in the creation of the conditions for safe and satisfying existence, development and survival of both individuals and communities. Security, as well as the norms and patterns of human actions (i.e. cultural patterns of security) serving security creation, become the supreme category. Hence, the anthropology of security concentrates on the individual and collective natural protective and defensive dispositions (properties). Thus its attention focuses on creating technologies of security and the wholeness of the human artefacts stemming from their applications. In the anthropological perspective, security appears a sphere of creation and—simultaneously—its ultimate result. Therefore, it is more than a condition/process (a mere prelude to analyses). It is an intentionally created construction of human thought and an entity of practical activities. The presented reflections are only a broad, overall outline in both diachronic and synchronic areas. The aim of the article is to specify and promote an integrative approach in understanding the essence and structuring of the anthropology of security.