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Ni guerra ni paz. Comparaciones internacionales de niños y jóvenes en violencia armada organizada

Publication year:

2005

Spanish

Format:

pdf (7.4 MiB)

Publisher:

Conducted at an international level, this study aims at understanding when, how and why children and adolescents are deciding to participate in organized armed violence in: Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Jamaica, Nigeria, Northern Ireland, Philippines, South Africa and the USA.  The report explores causes and trends of the problem and suggests policy oriented guidelines within the international forum for the implementation of practical steps to treat children and youth in organised armed violence (COAV).  The study  further presents the personal life stories of gang members, giving insights on their influences, motivations and fears. Most of the children interviewed in this report were armed and full group members by the age of 14.

The report argues that state violence and corruption are perverse ingredients that create a fertile breeding-ground for for gang activities, and among the measures suggested to combat COAV include: community empowerment; gun control; socially and economically inclusive policies focused on impoverished urban areas; fast-track education in vulnerable areas; and ensuring more efficient, accountable and capable security and juridicial systems to deal with gangs so that they can be a credible part of the solution.

The study was financed by Save the Children Sweden,  Ford Foundation, DFID and World Vision, and coordinated by Viva Rio and  COAV.

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Authors

Luke Dowdney

3 Publications

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Spanish

1 Documents

Ni guerra ni paz. Comparaciones internacionales de niños y jóvenes en violencia armada organizada

Document information

Authors

Dowdney, Luke

Format

pdf

Country

Brazil, Colombia, El Salvador, Honduras, Jamaica, Nigeria, Philippines, South Africa, St Kitts, St Lucia

Region

Caribbean, Europe, Northern America, South America, South-eastern Asia, Southern Africa, West and Central Africa

Rights

© Author/Publisher

Keywords

Child protectionChild soldiersChildren and armed conflictChildren's rightsOrganised crimePreventionRecruitmentRehabilitationSubstance abuseYouth

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