6Andrzej Żebrowski
community or nation is happiness or justice for others will mean quite the oppos-
ite. Some people under specic conditions are happy and secure, while others under
the same conditions will be desperate, lost and live with a sense of insecurity. Security
at the level of the individual is generally associated with peace, whereas at higher
levels, e.g. at the national and international levels, we usually associate security
with peace, as the opposite of war.”1
Security is a primordial need of individuals, social groups, nations, states and con-
tinents. It is not a once and for all good. It is subject to evolution, depends on shifting
balances of power and is a function of changes in the global security environment.
Given that it is a process where participants in international relations form a mosaic
of states that are diverse in terms of: aspirations and inuence of a given state on in-
ternational relations, geostrategic, geopolitical, historical, ethnic, national, religious,
cultural and many other conditions – it requires a comprehensive approach taking into
account the scale and dynamics of the changes taking place.
During the period of the bipolar division of the world, security issues were closely
linked: with military policy, with military structures, with armed forces and defence
in the broadest sense. The erosion and collapse of this system was a triumph of Western
politics. However, these transformations bring with them serious international con-
cerns and problems; their development and consequences were probably not foreseen
by the architects of this policy.2 It is worth bearing in mind, however, that all changes,
including those in the modern world, are very complex and cannot be predicted, let
alone their side eects avoided. For we are witnessing progressive globalisation,
which, with the breakdown of the bipolar division of the world, does not encoun-
ter any barriers and is accompanied by systemic, socio-political, cultural, economic
and military transformations with unforeseeable consequences. The development
of organised cross-border crime, terrorism, the phenomena of nationalism, chauvinism
and religious fundamentalism must also be taken into account. The mass movement
of people, knowledge, services, nances and hostile ideas is also an important issue.
It is therefore important to modify the approach to security views in particular, includ-
ing national and international security.
Currently, the concept of security refers to almost all areas of development: polit-
ical, ideological, social, cultural, ethnic, demographic, economic, nancial, access to
natural energy resources, scientic, technical, technological, food, information, in-
formation technology (ICT, cyber), environmental, health and military etc. This cata-
logue is open-ended and will be systematically supplemented with the progress
of civilisation.
“In specic situations individual aspects may be dominant and the order presented
above will not correspond to reality. However, it seems that, regardless of the cir-
cumstances of the environment, the political aspect will always be dominant, if not
at the beginning of the development of the situation, then certainly during. It is worth
1 Gołębiewski, J., National Security of the Republic of Poland, [in:] Universal Rescue System
and Defence and State Security, „Zeszyt Problemowy Towarzystwo Wiedzy Obronnej” 1999,
no. 1, p. 5.
2 Dworecki, S., From conict to war, BUWIK Publishing House, Warsaw 1996, p. 11.