The objective of security sector reform (SSR) is to achieve good security sector governance (SSG)—where security actors are effective and accountable to their people. For example, SSR might guide decision-making on what form should the oversight of armed forces take or how transparent will intelligence agencies be according to legislation.[3] Different nomenclature of the same overall framework include security system reform (SSR), security sector reconstruction (SSR) and justice and security sector reform (JSSR).[4]
History
In 1994, the
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) adopted a Code of Conduct on Politico-Military Aspects of Security stating that the democratic control of the security sector as essential to stability.[5]
The framework emerged after
Saferworld staff observed from examples in
South Africa,
Indonesia and countries in Eastern Europe that national security and its components were considered crucial in a state recovering from
conflict or an
authoritarian regime. On 13 May 1998,
Clare Short, Secretary of State for International Development, used the term for the first time, publicly, during a speech at the
Royal College of Defence Studies.[6] Reportedly, the increasing number of
civil wars led development actors to look at the problem of insecurity from the perspective of good governance. The conclusion was that the security sector should adhere to the same rules of good governance as any other public service to curb conflict and violence.[4][7][8]
In 2014, the
United Nations Security Council (UNSC) adopted its first stand-alone resolution on SSR and within it the role of security sector reform in stabilizing post-conflict countries.[9][10]
Scope
There is no single globally accepted definition of security sector reform (SSR), but it generally refers to a process to reform or rebuild a state's
security sector towards good security sector governance (SSG).[11][12] Good SSG is usually defined as a number of idealized principles and good practices of a healthy security sector servicing its people. Likewise, the objective of SSR is defined as the application of the same principles of
good governance to the security sector as to any other public sector service delivery, such as
public health or
education.[1][2][13] For example, the
Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has defined four standards that SSR should strive for:
1. Establishment of effective governance, oversight and accountability in the security system; 2) improved delivery of security and justice services; 3) development of local leadership and ownership of the reform process; and 4) sustainability of justice and security service delivery.[14]
The target of SSR are the components of the state that uphold
national security. Although the security sector is therefore a wide term open to interpretation, it is generally used to describe the structures, institutions and personnel responsible for the management, provision and oversight of security in a certain country.[15] Therefore, the scope and target of SSR has usually been defined comprising the following four groups:
Core security actors, such as armed forces, police, gendarmerie, border guards, customs and immigration, and intelligence and security services;
security management and oversight bodies, such as ministries of defence and internal affairs, financial management bodies and public complaints commissions;
justice and law enforcement institutions, such as the judiciary, prisons, prosecution services, traditional justice systems; and
To observe and measure the quality of SSG as well as set more definite objectives,
international development actors generally break down good security sector governance into different principles that are believed to showcase different subparts of a healthy security sector under democratic control.[17] While exact configurations vary, some of the most common principles or objectives of good SSG that are commonly used include
accountability,
rule of law, and
effectiveness.[18][19]
A multitude of different practical situations of good SSG exist according to development actors: For example, in a security sector led by good governance, the
use of force is defined by a legal framework. This subsequently requires, among others, that publicly transparent
laws are in place; oversight and
separation of powers mechanisms are established and working; and the state's
legitimate use of force is regulated through strategies and policies.[1][14] An operational level example would be improved and open interaction between the public and the security sector, including functioning
freedom of information and
complaint institutes.[4]
SSR is aimed at the existence of both national security and
human security. However, the goals of providing national and human security can be conflictual in the context of conflict-torn societies which lack the framework of democratic governance. According to Florian Weigand, the experiences of SSR in
Afghanistan, for example, have prompted a debate on the advantages of providing human rather than state security in the process of state-building.[20]
Implementation
SSR is considered an instrument of international
development aid; and attaining good SSG is seen by practitioners as a conflict prevention tool and as a post-conflict stabilizer.[21][7] Examples of mechanisms that international actors reportedly use to perform security sector reform include
disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR) programmes to try and synchronize reforms to the security sector—and rule of law reforms as justice and security sectors are often considered intertwined.[22][23][12] Likewise, SSR can be performed along transitional justice processes if the security sector has a legacy of violence against the population—and during
security policy discussions to use SSR in supporting the implementation and reviews of the states' national security policy and strategy.[23][3][4]
SSR is not understood by researchers to be limited to a single political situation, but rather can be introduced in various contexts. The circumstances under which reform efforts are undertaken are often classified as three different reform environments: post-conflict,
transitional and
developed countries. Nevertheless, security sector reform is most commonly introduced in post-conflict settings after
war has ceased.[24] However, its insensitive application to such contexts has raised criticism. For example, Jane Chanaa has argued that there is a concept–context divide because conceptualisation overshadowed the understanding on how the idea adapts to the local situations whereas Safal Ghimire has noted that such a chasm exists also because the 'SSR' concept does not talk about reforms in the benefactors.[25][26]
^Weiss, Thomas G. (2000-10-01). "Governance, good governance and global governance: Conceptual and actual challenges". Third World Quarterly. 21 (5): 795–814.
doi:
10.1080/713701075.
ISSN0143-6597.
S2CID143243345.
^"6.10 DDR and Security Sector Reform"(PDF). Integrated Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Standards. UN DDR Resource Centre. 2009.
Archived(PDF) from the original on 2015-11-23.
Gebrehiwot Berhe, Mulugeta and Detzner, Sarah (2020) Sustaining momentum: seizing the opportunity for SSR in Sudan. Conflict Research Programme. Conflict and Civil Society Research Unit, LSE. (
[1])