Security management in governance is broader than police and army. It includes national security, human security, disaster risk, cyber threats, border management, organized crime, social cohesion and institutional resilience.

Core Definitions

National Security

Standard definition: Protection of sovereignty, territorial integrity, political independence and vital national interests.

Exam meaning: देशको सार्वभौमिकता, अखण्डता र महत्वपूर्ण राष्ट्रिय हितको सुरक्षा।

Human Security

Standard definition: Security approach focused on people’s freedom from fear, want and indignity.

Exam meaning: मानिसको जीवन, जीविका, अधिकार र सम्मान सुरक्षित गर्ने security दृष्टिकोण।

Security Management

Standard definition: Coordinated use of policy, institutions, intelligence, resources and response systems to prevent and manage threats.

Exam meaning: खतरा रोकथाम र व्यवस्थापनका लागि नीति, संस्था, सूचना, स्रोत र response को समन्वय।

Conceptual Depth

Modern security is multi-dimensional. A senior administrator must understand threat assessment, prevention, preparedness, response, recovery, coordination and rights-based accountability.

Security Challenge Spectrum

Nepal faces traditional and non-traditional security challenges.

  • Traditional: border management, sovereignty, geopolitical sensitivity, internal order.
  • Non-traditional: disaster, climate risk, pandemic, food/water insecurity, cyber threats, migration vulnerability.
  • Societal: identity conflict, misinformation, extremism, social fragmentation.
  • Economic: financial fraud, illicit trade, smuggling, infrastructure vulnerability.
  • Administrative: weak coordination, poor data, delayed response and fragmented command.

Security Management Cycle

Use cycle logic in answers.

Stage Meaning Administrative Tool
Risk assessment Identify threats and vulnerability Data, intelligence, mapping
Prevention Reduce likelihood Law, awareness, surveillance
Preparedness Ready capacity Training, stockpile, SOP
Response Immediate action Command, communication, rescue
Recovery Restore and learn Relief, reconstruction, evaluation

Rights-Based Security

Security must protect both state and citizens.

  • Use of authority must follow law and proportionality.
  • Human rights and due process prevent abuse.
  • Community trust improves intelligence and prevention.
  • Transparency and accountability improve legitimacy.
  • Security policy must protect vulnerable groups.

Analytical Framework

  • Threat: What is the risk and who is affected?
  • Vulnerability: Why are people/institutions exposed?
  • Institution: Which agency has mandate?
  • Coordination: Which agencies and levels must work together?
  • Rights: What legal/human-rights safeguards apply?
  • Resilience: How will systems recover and learn?
  • Technology: What role for data, GIS, cyber tools and early warning?

Nepal-Specific Application

  • Nepal’s open border, terrain, disaster exposure and geopolitical position shape security management.
  • Disaster risk is a major governance-security issue, not only humanitarian issue.
  • Cybersecurity is growing with digital government, financial technology and data systems.
  • Federal structure requires clear security coordination among federal, provincial and local institutions.
  • Community policing, local disaster committees and early-warning systems can strengthen human security.
Security Area Key Challenge Management Response
Border Movement, trade, illicit flow Coordination, technology, diplomacy
Disaster Earthquake, flood, landslide Risk mapping and preparedness
Cyber Data breach, fraud, service disruption Security standards and incident response
Social cohesion Misinformation, conflict Dialogue and community trust
Organized crime Networked illegal activity Intelligence and interagency cooperation

Exam Point

  • Security management answer should include human security and non-traditional threats.
  • Use risk-management cycle.
  • Mention federal coordination and rights safeguards.
  • Cyber and disaster are strong contemporary examples.

25-Mark Answer Structure

  • Define security management.
  • Classify traditional and non-traditional threats.
  • Analyze Nepal-specific vulnerabilities.
  • Explain management cycle and institutions.
  • Discuss rights/accountability safeguards.
  • Recommend resilience-oriented reforms.

Model Argument

Nepal’s security management should shift from reactive control to risk-informed resilience. This requires integrated intelligence, disaster preparedness, cyber capacity, community trust and intergovernmental coordination.

Diagrams and Tables To Practice

  • Security risk cycle.
  • Traditional vs non-traditional security matrix.
  • Threat-vulnerability-capacity-risk model.
  • Federal security coordination map.

Common Mistakes

  • Writing only army/police.
  • Ignoring human security.
  • No disaster/cyber dimension.
  • No rights and accountability safeguards.

Revision Questions

  • What is human security?
  • What are non-traditional security threats?
  • How is disaster risk a security issue?
  • Why is cyber security important for governance?

Summary

  • Modern security is multi-dimensional.
  • Nepal needs risk-informed and coordinated security management.
  • Human rights and trust are part of security effectiveness.
  • Disaster, cyber, border and social cohesion are high-yield areas.