-
Our work
-
Fields of work
- Arms control
- Border management
- Combating trafficking in human beings
- Conflict prevention and resolution
- Countering terrorism
- Cyber/ICT Security
- Democratization
- Economic activities
- Education
- Elections
- Environmental activities
- Gender equality
- Good governance
- Human rights
- Media freedom and development
- Migration
- National minority issues
- Policing
- Reform and co-operation in the security sector
- Roma and Sinti
- Rule of law
- Tolerance and non-discrimination
- Youth
- Field operations
- Projects
-
Meetings and conferences
- Summit meetings
- Review Conferences
- Ministerial Council meetings
- Plenary meetings of the Permanent Council
- Plenary Meetings of the Forum for Security Co-operation
- Security Review Conferences
- Annual Implementation Assessment Meetings
- Economic and Environmental Forum
- Economic and Environmental Dimension Implementation Meetings
- Human rights meetings
- Media conferences
- Cyber/ICT security conferences
- Conference of the Alliance against Trafficking in Persons
- Gender Equality Review Conferences
- Annual OSCE Mediterranean conferences
- Annual OSCE Asian conferences
- Partnerships
-
Fields of work
-
Countries
- All
-
Participating States
- Albania
- Andorra
- Armenia
- Austria
- Azerbaijan
- Belgium
- Belarus
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Bulgaria
- Canada
- Croatia
- Cyprus
- Czechia
- Denmark
- Estonia
- Finland – OSCE Chairpersonship 2025
- France
- Georgia
- Germany
- Greece
- Holy See
- Hungary
- Iceland
- Ireland
- Italy
- Kazakhstan
- Kyrgyzstan
- Latvia
- Liechtenstein
- Lithuania
- Luxembourg
- Malta
- Moldova
- Monaco
- Mongolia
- Montenegro
- The Netherlands
- North Macedonia
- Norway
- Poland
- Portugal
- Romania
- Russian Federation
- San Marino
- Serbia
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Spain
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- Tajikistan
- Türkiye
- Turkmenistan
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- United States of America
- Uzbekistan
- Asian Partners for Co-operation
- Mediterranean Partners for Co-operation
-
Structures and institutions
- Chairpersonship
-
Secretariat
- Secretary General
- Office of the Secretary General
- Conflict Prevention Centre
- Transnational Threats Department
- Office of the Special Representative and Co-ordinator for Combating Trafficking in Human Beings
- Office of the Co-ordinator of OSCE Economic and Environmental Activities
- Gender Issues Programme
- Opportunities for Youth
- Department of Human Resources
- Department of Management and Finance
- Office of Internal Oversight
- Documentation Centre in Prague
- Institutions
-
Field operations
- Presence in Albania
- Centre in Ashgabat
- Programme Office in Astana
- Programme Office in Bishkek
- Mission to Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Programme Office in Dushanbe
- Mission in Kosovo
- Mission to Moldova
- Mission to Montenegro
- Mission to Serbia
- Mission to Skopje
- Project Co-ordinator in Uzbekistan
- Closed field activities
- Parliamentary Assembly
- Court of Conciliation and Arbitration
- Organizational structure
- About us
Story
A security community for the 21st century
- Date:
- Source:
- Summits / Ministerial Councils
By Marc Perrin de Brichambaut, OSCE Secretary General
Security is a complex notion and can be approached in different ways. At a basic level it could mean feeling safe in your own home – it could mean having a home in the first place. Security is also about confidence in government and in everyday encounters with officialdom. Security begins with the sustainability of resources and the availability of opportunities – for education or for work, regardless of gender, religion or ethnicity. It is rooted in the inviolability of rights and in the belief that there is adequate recourse if those rights are violated.
Security is about feeling relatively certain that tomorrow will not differ so greatly from today. Security between states is similarly rooted in the need for stability and confidence: it requires trust.
Through co-operation, the OSCE builds trust in its region of 56 participating States, including Canada and the United States and the countries of the European Union, South-Eastern Europe, the South Caucasus, the Russian Federation and the CIS. Our endeavour started as a conference to bridge East and West at the height of the Cold War, and today works through dialogue and projects on the ground in areas ranging from arms control, border management, police reform, elections, media freedom and environment to combating human trafficking and terrorism and promoting minority rights and tolerance.
The OSCE is not the only international organization working on these issues, and we pool resources and complement the efforts of other institutions. But our Organization is unique in that it addresses all of these areas and more, through a set of commitments shared by all participating States, as aspects of our common security.
The 56 participating States are meeting at the highest level in Astana on 1 and 2 December. It is the first such meeting with Heads of State, partner countries and international and regional organizations since the OSCE Summit in Istanbul in 1999.
What is at stake? Heads of State meet regularly, in different configurations, on a regular basis. Just before the OSCE Summit in Astana there will be a NATO-Russia Council Summit in Lisbon, and just after EU and Russian leaders will meet in Brussels. Why does it matter that the OSCE will be holding its first Summit in more than a decade?
The OSCE makes decisions on the basis of consensus, and getting 56 States to agree to hold a Summit is no easy task. The fact that they are meeting at the highest level is already a success. The willingness of so many world leaders to come to Astana is an honest admission that there are urgent problems that our countries must address – from transnational threats such as terrorism and trafficking, to the protracted conflicts in our region and the situation in Afghanistan - and recognition that the OSCE is the right forum for these talks.
But the Summit is also an expression of hope, of a shared conviction that it is worth coming together to find a way forward and to work for more than maintaining the status quo. To be sure, the status quo is a remarkable achievement as many of our states enjoy a level of security nearly unimaginable just 20 years ago. But the crisis in Kyrgyzstan makes it clear that our work is not done, and that we have a collective responsibility to do better.
The OSCE Summit most of all represents an opportunity to work towards an inclusive security community which embraces all our peoples and states, and which leaves no areas of contention to fester and develop into new threats. The NATO and EU summits with Russia are critical parts of our region’s continuous security dialogue, and my hope is that the OSCE Summit in Astana will be able to build on the positive outcomes of Lisbon and contribute to a constructive atmosphere in Brussels.
What the OSCE can uniquely offer is a forum of equals – not a meeting of sides or blocs, but of countries with differing perspectives and aims which are nevertheless willing to replace mutual suspicion with trust, and take up the hard work of building a more capable security community for the 21st century.
OSCE Impact
Discover more stories about how the OSCE improves lives.