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Căutarea după subiecte similare conform CZU |
327+396 (1) |
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SM ISO690:2012 ALBU, Natalia. Inclusive security – indicator of good governance and sustainable development. In: Patrimoniul cultural de ieri – implicații în dezvoltarea societății durabile de mâine, Ed. 3, 11-12 februarie 2021, Chişinău. Chișinău, Republica Moldova: 2021, Ediția 3, pp. 22-24. ISSN 2558 – 894X. |
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Patrimoniul cultural de ieri – implicații în dezvoltarea societății durabile de mâine Ediția 3, 2021 |
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Conferința "Yesterday’s heritage – implications for the development of tomorrow’s sustainable society" 3, Chişinău, Moldova, 11-12 februarie 2021 | ||||||
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CZU: 327+396 | ||||||
Pag. 22-24 | ||||||
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Defined by the ONU, „inclusive security” refers to the principle that peace negotiations and conflict resolution processes are necessary fundamental social changes to ensure a high quality of life for all human beings. In this context, it is important to transform conflict relations into productive, democratic and political relations. For this to happen, the government must focus not only on traditional definitions of national interest, but also at the same time, focusing on security necessary for the survival and well-being of its citizens. Respectively, sustainable peace, security and stability are ensured only when the whole society is represented and free to participate in the construction of its own well-being. In this context, it is particularly important to ensure inclusive security represents the 17 objectives of the 2030 Agenda, in particular SDG 5 Gender Equality and SDG 16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions on Achieving Gender Equality and Empowering All Women and Girls and Promoting Peaceful and Inclusive Societies for Sustainable Development, ensuring access to justice for all and creating effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels. At the same time, in the current security environment, in the context of the pandemic type COVID-19, highlights the debates on the role of women in the crisis management process. There are already studies that show that countries with women-led governments better provide basic human needs, a component of the social progress index, which considers aspects of basic health care, sanitation, shelter and personal safety. Countries with female leadership are among the top countries with a high indicator on good governance and the performance score on the Women, Peace and Security Index. Thus, gender-sensitive policies and practices should be considered a precondition for responding to challenges and will become a reflection for decision-makers involved in crisis management, preparedness, response and mitigation. All the more so as a transformative vision of a post-COVID-19 world will be centered on people, prevention, peace, cooperation and human security. In this context, empathy, trust and solidarity are needed for a better understanding of different security needs |
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