Viewed: 39 - Published at: 7 years ago

for nearly a decade, the World Bank has been reiterating its finding that "crime and violence have emerged in recent years as major obstacles to the realization of development objectives."8 The Bank has stated flatly, "In many developing countries, high levels of crime and violence not only undermine people's safety on an everyday level, they also undermine broader development efforts to improve governance and reduce poverty."9 Multiple studies by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime {UNODC} have concluded that restraining violence is a precondition to poverty alleviation and economic development, plainly stating that "a foundational level of order must be established before development objectives can be realized."10 Leaders of the United Kingdom's Department for International Development {DFID} have concluded, "Poor people want to feel safe and secure just as much as they need food to eat, clean water to drink and a job to give them an income. Without security there cannot be development."11 When it comes to violence, researchers are increasingly concerned that development experts are missing Amartya Sen's insight that "development {is} a process of expanding the real freedoms people enjoy," and are failing to appreciate the idea "that freedom from crime and violence are key components of development. Freedom from fear is as important as freedom from want. It is impossible to truly enjoy one of these rights without the other."12

( Gary A. Haugen )
[ The Locust Effect: Why the End ]
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