Security studies Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Security Studies – the academic sub‑field of International Relations that examines organized violence, military conflict, and both national and international security.
Scope Expansion – increasingly includes economic, environmental, and public‑health security.
Interdisciplinary Nature – draws on history, geography (classical geopolitics), military science, criminology, and IR theory.
Related Subfields – Human security, International security, Peace & conflict studies, Critical security studies, Feminist security studies, Strategic studies, Military science.
📌 Must Remember
Originated 1918‑1939 (between WWI and WWII).
RAND Corporation shaped post‑WWII U.S. security studies.
Cold‑War growth driven by Thomas Schelling and Henry Kissinger (nuclear deterrence).
Core journals: International Security and Security Studies.
Contemporary publications stress interdisciplinary research.
Traditional focus: state‑centric security; newer trends stress human‑centric and non‑state threats.
🔄 Key Processes
Early Foundations (1918‑1939) – focus on state survival and war.
Post‑War Institutional Influence – RAND produces policy‑oriented research, institutionalizing the field in the U.S.
Cold‑War Expansion – deterrence theory → nuclear strategy → realist dominance.
Interdisciplinary Broadening – integration of economics, environment, health, geography, and criminology.
Publication Evolution – top journals publish more interdisciplinary articles, reflecting the broadened scope.
🔍 Key Comparisons
Security Studies vs. International Security – SS = academic discipline; IS = study of state/system safety.
Traditional (State‑Centric) vs. Critical Security – traditional = focus on state survival; critical = challenges state‑centric bias, includes non‑state actors.
Human Security vs. State Security – human security protects individuals from disease, hunger, environment; state security protects sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Strategic Studies vs. Military Science – strategic = planning & conduct of war; military = theory & practice of armed forces.
⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“Security studies = only military” – ignores economic, environmental, and health dimensions.
“All security journals are military‑focused” – top journals publish interdisciplinary work.
“Critical security rejects all security concerns” – it reframes who is protected, not that protection is irrelevant.
🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
Concentric‑Circle Model – core circle = state security; next rings = economic, environmental, health, and human security.
“Lens” Metaphor – choose the lens (state‑centric, human‑centric, critical) that best fits the threat being analyzed.
🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Public‑Health Security – e.g., pandemics, not traditionally covered but now central to the field.
Environmental Security – climate‑induced conflict; an emerging sub‑topic that may appear in “new security” discussions.
📍 When to Use Which
State‑Centric Lens → questions about sovereignty, deterrence, military balance.
Human‑Centric Lens → threats to individuals (disease, hunger, climate).
Critical / Feminist Lens → analyses that question gendered power structures or state‑centric bias.
Strategic Studies Lens → planning, doctrine, or conduct of war.
Military Science Lens → technical or doctrinal aspects of armed forces.
👀 Patterns to Recognize
Cold‑War Keywords – “deterrence”, “Schelling”, “Kissinger”.
Interdisciplinary Cue Words – “economics”, “environment”, “public health”, “geography”.
Journal References – mention of International Security or Security Studies signals a mainstream, peer‑reviewed source.
🗂️ Exam Traps
Distractor: “Security studies only deals with military strategy.” – wrong; the field now includes non‑military threats.
Distractor: “RAND’s influence ended after the 1960s.” – RAND’s methodological legacy persists throughout modern security studies.
Distractor: “Critical security studies reject all traditional security concepts.” – they critique how security is defined, not that security exists.
Distractor: “Feminist security studies is a separate discipline.” – it is a sub‑field within security studies focusing on gender.
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