Title: HESP Academic Fellowship Program 20082009
1HESP Academic Fellowship Program2008-2009
- In the name of the national interest
- Reflections on Security and Competitiveness of
Nations in the 21st Century - (Comparative Analysis of the National Security
Strategies - of USA, Russia and EU member states)
Denitza Hinkova, AFP RS Political Science
Department Sofia University St. Kliment
Ohridski, Bulgaria
2There are only a few types of surprises and
direct actions.Yet you can always vary the ones
you use.There is no limit to the ways you can
win.Sun Tzu The Art of War
- Companies not nations are on the frontline of
international competition. - Michael Porter
3Project overview
- Why do some nations win or lose a share of the
world trade? and on the other handWhat does it
mean to speak in the name of the nation?. - These two brilliant questions, offered in two
inspiring works the first one by the strategic
management expert and Harvard Business School
Professor - Michael Porter and the second one
by one of the most influential contemporary
scholars in Nationalism Studies Rogers
Brubaker, challenged me to explore the relation
between the national interest, national security
and the competitive advantage of nations.
4Research Analysis
- The first line of research analysis leads to the
competitiveness potentials of nations, the
resources for prosperity and competitive
strategies illustrated by the Diamond Model of
Michael Porter and exemplified by the Global
Competitive Index for 2008-2009. - The second line starts from the notion that
Nations are understood as real entities, as as
communities, as substantial, enduring
colectivities. That they exists is taken for
granted, although how they exist and how they
came to exist - is much disputed. -
5Aims
- The aims to research explore
- how the main national strategic documents
respresent the national interest - to what extend nation is used/misused as a
paradigm and as a political idiom - how the priotities of the national interests
provide sustainable competitive advantage for
nations.
6Background
- After European Security Strategy (2003) most of
EU the member states have introduced new
strategic documents which reflect the general
European agenda. - Especially since 2007, new national security
strategies have been developed and made public in
the Netherlands, the UK and Germany, and the last
was that of France, in June 2008. They stem from
modern states need to update the security model
they have been providing for their societies, and
their publication is novel because until now
European governments had never committed to
writing what they perceived their security
problems to be. Some had White Papers on Defence
or Home Affairs, but they had never yet decided
to emulate the US tradition or the precedent of
the European Security Strategy of 2003. - As a result of this trend most countries have
similar content in the security strategies,
especially in the list of threats and
countermeasures. Most strategies lack specific
competitive advantage and are simply based on the
reflection of EU and NATO documents.
7National Security Concepts and Strategies
- These national security strategies lay out the
respective governments vision of the risks and
threats that their societies face and the way in
which the authorities plan to provide security to
the State and its citizens. The strategies
contain, at the very least, a concept of national
security, an assessment of the security problems
that affect it, the tools available to the State
and the measures that should be adopted. The
strategies that have appeared each have their own
specific features but they share common concepts
and contents. - These concepts also coincide in the area of
protection population, society and territory,
with some variations (in the case of France,
there is a contribution to international security
and republican values).
812 basic competitiveness criteria/pillars
- In the research inquiry for the political
implications on the competitiveness of nations,
the project will be based on twelve basic
competitiveness criteria/pillars and the Diamond
Model, proposed by Michael Porter, in order to
compare the different cases and find conclusions. - Basic requirements
- Institutions
- Infrastructure
- Macroeconomic stability
- Health and primary education
- Efficiency enhancers
- Higher education and training
- Goods market efficiency
- Labor market efficiency
- Financial market sophistication
- Technological readiness
- Market size
- Innovation and sophistication factors
- Business sophistication
- Innovation
9Preliminary Hypothesis
- Competitive advantage of nations is of vital
importance for the formulation and implementation
of national security strategies, especially when
the critical assets of states are at stake.
Strategies that lead to the success of nations
focus on the correct use of national interest and
provide fertile soil for innovative development.
10Key Questions
- Who are the winners and losers competing on the
global market and how can our nations benefit
from that? - What is the most appropriate form of appeal to
the national interest? - What does it really mean to speak in the name of
the Nation, We the People, in the name of
public interests, when at stake is the basic
survival of nations?
11Methodology
- Qualitative and quantitative methods (statistical
data from the Global Competitiveness Report) - Comparative analysis of 18 national security
strategies - SWOT analysis (inherent for the strategic
analysis), - Risk analysis
- Content analysis (if necessary it will be applied
only for the terms national interest and
advantage.
12Objectives
- The main objective of the project is to underline
the importance of the strategic priority of the
national interests, ordered in accordance with
the contemporary challenges and global
competition. - The wise policy-makers should count on the
specific national strategic advantage in order to
tackle threats and challenges and defend the
national interests. - The future prosperity belongs states that invest
in innovations and that use efficiently the
available human, information and technological
resources for the well-being of the nation.
13Expected results
- On the basis of the 10 strategies investigated so
far and the core theoretical readings, I expect
to - revise the political uses of the national
interest only as a paradigm - open a debate on the importance of competitive
advantage implied in security strategies as the
main strategic framework of states - find some recommendations for the future.
14Timetable of research
- December 2008 - January 2009. Analysis of 10
national security strategies - the main theoretical resources, statistical data
and reports - January February 2009. Analysis of 8 national
security strategies/policies of EU members states - Consultations with Prof. Todor Tanev, Professor
in Strategic Governance at the Sofia University. - March end of April 2009. Feedback from the
peer-reviews and finalization of the project.
15Concepts
- Competitiveness A nations level of
competitiveness reflects the extent to which it
is able to provide rising prosperity to its
citizens. - The set of institutions, policies, and factors
that determine the level of productivity of a
country. - The concept of competitiveness thus involves
static and dynamic components although the
productivity of a country clearly determines its
ability to sustain a high level of income, it is
also one of the central determinants of the
returns to investment, which is one of the key
actors explaining an economys growth potential.
16Concepts
- National interest Interests are the desired
values of vital importance for the states such as
survival, economic well-being, and enduring
national values. The national elements of power
are the resources used to promote or advance
national interests. Strategy is the pursuit,
protection, or advancement of theses interests
through the application of the instruments of
power.
17Comments of the Review
- Peer Review by Luciana-Alexandra Ghica
- There is no link between the conceptual
framework and the empirical data. How can
competitiveness be assessed? How can one
recognize competitiveness? Isnt it there anyway
in the premises of the research, therefore its
difficult to falsify any theory that focuses on
such a concept? And ultimately, why
competitiveness is more relevant than other
concepts for understanding the dynamics of
national security strategies?
18Comments of the Review-1
- Methodology
- There might be too many complex methods to be
tested. Taking into account that there are 18
cases, the amount of work for this project may be
too big for one researcher and for a relatively
short time so that empirical data remain
relatively stable over the research period.
Therefore, I strongly suggest focusing on a
cluster of methods that could help build a
stronger argument and to let the
comprehensiveness for bigger projects. Or
alternatively, I suggest to renounce to a number
of cases or to group them in such a way that a
meaningful comparison is possible with less
effort. In relation to that, it would be
interesting to understand also which were the
substantive criteria for selecting the cases. In
order to decide upon such issues, maybe a sharper
research question may help.
19Global Competitiveness Report 2008-2009
- A nations prosperity depends on its
competitiveness, which is based on the
productivity with which it produces goods and
servicesCompetitiveness is rooted in a nations
microeconomic fundamentalsthe sophistication of
company operations and strategies and the quality
of the microeconomic business environment in
which companies compete.
20The Global Competitiveness Index 20082009
- OVERALL INDEX (Top 10 countries)
- United States
- Switzerland
- Denmark
- Sweden
- Singapore
- Finland
- Germany
- Netherlands
- Japan
- Canada
21Country Rankings 2008-2009Top Ten
22The Dimanond Model of M
23Bibliography
- Brubaker, Rogers. In the Name of the Nation
reflections on nationalism and Patriotism//Citizen
ship Studies, Vol.8, No. 2, June 2004, pp.
115-127 - Brubaker, Rogers. Nationalism Reframed
Nationhood and the National Question in the New
Europe. Cambridge Cambridge University Press,
1996. - Buzan, B. and Wæver. Regions and Powers the
Structure of International Security, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge, 2003. - Krause, Keith. Towards a Practical Human Security
Agenda. Geneva Center for Democratic Control of
the Armed Forces (DCAF).DCAF Policy Papers, 2006.
ttp//www.dcaf.ch/publications - Leadership and National Security Reform The Next
President's Agenda. Edited by Dr. Joseph R.
Cerami, Dr. Robert H. Dorff, Lisa Moorman.
http//www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/ - Missiroli, Antonio. Revisiting the European
Security Strattegy beyond 2008. European Policy
Center, Policy Brief, April 2008. - National Security Policy// Backgrounder.
Security Sector Policy and Reforms, November
2005, Geneva Center for Democratic Control of the
Armed Forces (DCAF).http//www.dcaf.ch/publication
s/kms/details.cfm?lngenid18417nav15 - Porter, Michael. The Competative Advantage of
Nations, Palgrave MacMillan, 1990. - Porter, Michael E., Klaus Schwab. The Global
Competitiveness Report 2008-2009. World Economic
Forum, Geneva, Switzerland, 2008.
http//www.weforum.org/pdf/GCR08/GCR08.pdf - Smith, Anthony D. The Nation is History
Historiographical Debates about Ethnicity and
Nationalism. University Press of New England,
2000. - Wulf, Herbert. The Future of the Public Monopoly
of Force//DCAF Publication. http//www.dcaf.ch/pub
lications/kms/details.cfm?lngenid44610nav15
24National Security Strategies
- Strategies analyzed so far
- National Security Strategy of USA (2006)
- National Strategy for Homeland Security of USA
(2007) - National Defense Strategy of USA (2008)
- European Security Staregy. A Secure Europe in a
Better World (2003) - National Security Concept of the Russian
Federation (2000) - National Security Strategy of UK (2008)
- National Security Strategy of the Netherlands
(2008) - National Security Strategy of Poland ( 2007)
-
25Instead of a conclusion
- There can be no greater role for government than
the protection and safety of its citizens. But
managing national security without a strategy is
like running an orchestra without a musical
score a recipe for an ill-coordinated and
out-of-tune response. A national security
strategy is not a panacea for joined-up
government, and there are limitations to
strategy a strategy by no means renders national
security invulnerable to threats. Nor does a
strategy eradicate all risks. It would, however,
enable the government to communicate clearly
concerning its ability and inability to safeguard
national security. (National Security Strategy
and Work Programme 2007-2008, Government of the
Netherlands, 2007)
26 - Thank you for your attention!