Social security is a comprehensive index to measure the four basic aspects of social security in a country or region. Including social security (measured by criminal crime rate per 10,000 people), traffic safety (measured by traffic accident mortality per million people), life safety (measured by fire accident mortality per million people) and production safety (measured by industrial accident mortality per million people).
Introduction:
Social security is one of the six modules of public security education pointed out in the Guiding Outline of Public Security Education in Primary and Secondary Schools.
The main contents of public safety education include six modules: social security, public health, accidental injury, network, information security, natural disasters and other accidents or events that affect students' safety.
Social security refers to the safety measures, countermeasures and knowledge of social events. Social events mainly include terrorist attacks, ethnic and religious incidents, economic security incidents, foreign-related emergencies and mass incidents.
Examples of social events: robbery, theft, swindlers, others in distress, accidental loss, student trampling, etc.
The overall security of society depends on the social development of a country. The speed of economic development, social equity, political system and historical and cultural reasons may all have an impact on social security.
When we pay attention to security issues, we are actually concerned about security risks and their prevention.
We must understand that security, as a value pursued by people, may conflict with values such as efficiency, freedom, innovation and development, and human rights. The pursuit of any value is not as high as possible. The key is to grasp the ever-changing degree.