five

Security psychology: New perspectives from the COVID-19 pandemic

收藏
PsychArchives2026-05-12 更新2026-05-16 收录
下载链接:
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/17405
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
In 1994, the United Nations human security taxonomy signaled a major shift from security as preservation of the nation-state towards a broader and more recent ‘decagonal’ model of human security (entailing everyday needs for personal, health, food, cyber, community, economic, national, environmental, political and, most recently, global security). Building on those foundations, this paper proposes a psychological theory of human security. The latter we propose is a question of ‘systems fit’ between everyday needs and priorities to official responses during crises like the COVID-19 pandemic. During COVID-19 lockdowns in 2021, across Australia and New Zealand, we asked N = 2,162 Australasians whether they had each type of security, how important each type was to them, and what each of the 10 sub-types of security meant to them. On face value, a pandemic is a primary threat to national public health. In everyday life, however, all 10 dimensions of human security remained salient and interconnected. peerReviewed publishedVersion
提供机构:
PsychOpen GOLD
创建时间:
2026-05-12
二维码
社区交流群
二维码
科研交流群
商业服务