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EN
The current text of the European Security Strategy is 12 years old. Its record relates to a world, even if not completely non-existent, then certainly one that is described selectively. As such it urgently requires a fresh look. Avoiding the strategic debate per se does not remove the need for the EU to act strategically. Its aim is not mere participation in international relations based on the existing potential to effectively protect Community interests. The lack of an upto-date security strategy blurs the clarity of purpose, weakens domestic consensus, and does not facilitate communication with other international actors. Pursuing strategies by collective actors (with multiple centres of decision-making), which is the case with the European Union, by its very nature cannot be easy. Democracy as a common denominator for the EU and the Member States’ status as sovereign decision-makers on strategic matters do not provide for a single dominant model of a security strategy. Thus, inevitably, both short-term decisions and the common strategic culture are the result of a laborious and rather slow process. The main purpose of the EU strategy, however, is to be simply an instrument of good policy and an effective reference point in planning specific, collective actions, conscious of the clearly stated interests of the entire Community. It is not replaceable by ad hoc measures or sectoral approaches (resulting solely from external circumstances, opportunities as they arise, or simply viewed as ersatz strategy). Having a strategy promotes the strong members in the implementation of their plans and in the case of the weaker—brings hope that their security situation will improve. Thus, it is also an attribute of global leadership, to which the EU aspires.
EN
The intrusion legal and security science in the Czech republic and Slovakia (the example formulations security doctrine). Central Europe, as part of Euro-Atlantic civilization, must react to the postmodern crisis of Western liberal capitelism, especially in the constitutional branch of the iusnaturalist substance of fundamental human rights and freedoms. Security and police authorities and bodies are part of the security community of a democratic state and their „secundum et intra legem“ acitivity is based on the postulates of legal, security and police sciences. The course police sciences iurisprudencia, the science of crime, security and constitution of police science in the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Police science and security doctrine and includ today – what are the intersections of the object of investigation?
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