the interlinkages between peace, sustainable development, human rights and other
fields, which are all relevant in countries affected by violence or conflict (HSU, 2016:6).
The breakdown of the balance of power post-Cold War proves that the war casualties
decreased over the time, based on statistics that prove the decline of political violence
at the global level. During the wars of the 1950s, about 700,000 people were killed, in
contrast to 2002, where this figure was only 20,000 people. At the same time, the
number of coup d’état (including attempts) has been massively reduced. For example,
1963 saw 25 coups, the most since the end of World War II, compared to 2004, which
saw 10 failed attempts. The number of massacres and genocides against civilians fell by
80% and international crises (considered the harbingers of war) saw enormous declines
alongside declines in arms trafficking, defense budgets and military personnel. In
parallel, with the decrease in wars, the number of refugees plummeted (Collins,
2022:144).
In addition to reduction of war casualties and external military encroachments, human
security also highlighted that people are largely threatened by asymmetric threats rather
than by large-scale wars. At the same time, human security through the UNDP report
branched out the focus point for security and created an image of comprehensive security
where national security is formed by an inseparable binomial between military and
humanitarian security. Although the military aspect is a determining factor of security,
“needs for global human security require a positive relationship between all states,
leading to a new era for development through cooperation.” (UNDP, 1994:4). This
concept has also been used to address issues of conflict and violence. In many conflicts,
civilians are the most exposed and affected. Human security pursues to offer protection
and support to these individuals by working with communities to identify and manage
sources of conflicts and how to peacefully resolve them. This approach aims to encourage
dialogue and reconciliation, rather than force and violence (Miller, 2005:24).
Reinforcing the idea that human security is an indispensable discipline in the 21st
century, the relationship between conflict and development in Africa must be analyzed.
Not coincidentally, most modern conflicts take place in poorer countries (Collins,
2022:131) and the “Westphalian” analytical scheme fails to analyze them because in
contemporary conflicts do not fit the idea of conflicts between diverse communities or an
oppressive regime. Consequently, through the UNDP report which underlines economic
security as a fundamental right (UNDP, 1994:61), the combination of poverty, destroyed
GDP, poor infrastructure, abundance of weapons, etc., make civil conflict inevitable
(Collins, 2022:131).
Decades of inter-ethnic and religious violence have undermined the process of creating
state authority which must face the presence of local governments, which are usually
more trusted than the central government. People-centered human security concept that
embraces holistic framework, emphasize interlinkages of violent conflicts and human
development as well as various actors placing the human being at the center of the
security concerns. While conceptual ambiguities among policy-makers, academicians and
security analysts in the human security field, still existent, the promoters of this issue,
maintain that its wide-ranging and holistic approach indicate its highest value in a world
affected by crises and inequalities. According to the UNHCR, “At the end of 2022, 108.4
million people worldwide were forcibly displaced as a result of persecution, conflict,