Reducing Urban Violence in Developing Countries

Author(s)
Moser, C.
Publication language
English
Pages
9pp
Date published
01 Nov 2006
Type
Plans, policy and strategy
Keywords
Conflict, violence & peace, Urban
Countries
Guatemala, Colombia
Organisations
The Brookings Institution

 

Urban violence is a serious development constraint in developing countries and increasingly dominates the daily lives of citizens across the globe. The accompanying increase in fear and insecurity has led to a wide-scale preoccupation with the phenomenon, but there is little agreement on the underlying causes of such endemic violence or of its costs and consequences. Equally, the capacity of various sector-specific violence reduction interventions to address this pervasive problem is often questioned.

This brief is informed by the findings from participatory urban appraisals of violence undertaken by the author in 1999 in eighteen poor urban communities in Colombia and Guatemala. These provide perception data from an extensive number of local women and men, girls and boys, whose daily lives are influenced by violence, insecurity, and fear. While participatory methodologies are now recognized as an important way of bringing the ‘voices of the poor’ to policymakers, to date they have focused on the problem of poverty. Thus this study pioneers a new violence-focused research methodology – first as a pilot project by the author in an earlier study of urban violence in Jamaica.