Implications of Globalization on National Security
Abstract
Concept of National Security is associated with the history of the United States of America following the Second World War, with the US Congress passing the first National Security Constitution in 1947. It traditionally had to do with the protection of the state against external aggression through economic, military, political, and diplomatic means. Recently however, it has been broadened to include human security a people centered approach to security, linking development to security and broadening both the identification of possible threats and the actors responsible for producing and resolving insecurity. The national security issues most impacted upon by globalization are generally found to fall into three categories: the nature of security threats in a globalised world, the effects of the phenomenon of globalization on the pursuit of national security, and the erosion of the exclusivity of the state as a provider of national security
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