The Problem with Templates: Learning from Organic Gang-Related Violence Reduction

IF 0.6 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Stability-International Journal of Security and Development Pub Date : 2015-10-29 DOI:10.5334/STA.GP
D. Rodgers, Steffen Jensen
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引用次数: 33

Abstract

This article considers what demobilisation, disarmament, and reintegration (DDR) programmes might learn from research on gangs and the problems associated with government-instituted ‘wars on gangs’ putatively aimed at reducing or fighting gang-related violence. It begins by considering interventions associated with the global war on gangs, and compares their underlying premises and practices with those of DDR programmes while highlighting how both are plagued with problems associated with drawing on de-contextualized templates. Drawing on long-term ethnographic research carried out in Nicaragua and South Africa, the article then goes on to explore why individuals leave gangs, focusing in particular on the more organic processes that deplete gangs of their members, as well as the consequences that the different possible occupational trajectories of ex-gang members can have for patterns of violence. These offer a number of potential lessons for DDR programmes, particularly with regard to reducing violence in a realistic and sustainable manner.
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模板的问题:从有机的帮派暴力减少中学习
本文考虑了复员、解除武装和重返社会(DDR)项目可以从帮派研究以及与政府制定的旨在减少或打击帮派相关暴力的“反帮派战争”相关的问题中学到什么。它首先考虑了与全球打击帮派战争相关的干预措施,并将其基本前提和做法与DDR计划进行了比较,同时强调了两者如何受到与绘制非情境化模板相关的问题的困扰。根据在尼加拉瓜和南非进行的长期人种学研究,文章接着探讨了人们离开帮派的原因,特别关注了使帮派成员枯竭的更有机的过程,以及前帮派成员不同的职业轨迹可能对暴力模式产生的影响。这为复员方案提供了一些可能的教训,特别是在以现实和可持续的方式减少暴力方面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Stability: International Journal of Security & Development is a fundamentally new kind of journal. Open-access, it publishes research quickly and free of charge in order to have a maximal impact upon policy and practice communities. It fills a crucial niche. Despite the allocation of significant policy attention and financial resources to a perceived relationship between development assistance, security and stability, a solid evidence base is still lacking. Research in this area, while growing rapidly, is scattered across journals focused upon broader topics such as international development, international relations and security studies. Accordingly, Stability''s objective is to: Foster an accessible and rigorous evidence base, clearly communicated and widely disseminated, to guide future thinking, policymaking and practice concerning communities and states experiencing widespread violence and conflict. The journal will accept submissions from a wide variety of disciplines, including development studies, international relations, politics, economics, anthropology, sociology, psychology and history, among others. In addition to focusing upon large-scale armed conflict and insurgencies, Stability will address the challenge posed by local and regional violence within ostensibly stable settings such as Mexico, Brazil, Russia, India, Indonesia and elsewhere.
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