Development Held Hostage: Assessing the Effects of Small Arms on Human Development
Author: R Muggah and P Batchelor
Date: 2002
Size:
44 pages
(56 KB)
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Current thinking recognises the role that small arms play in intensifying the effects of internal conflict, and undermining development. However, the linkages between armed conflict, social violence, small arms, and development are complex and difficult to research. How can practitioners assess and deal with the impact of small arms on development interventions?
This United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) report addresses these issues, recommending a preventative approach that goes beyond interventions focussed only on security and disarmament. Violence using small arms is a major contributing factor to increased poverty and human insecurity. Small arms are cheap, portable and available, and are the weapons of choice in civil war and organised crime. Their direct impacts on human development are death and injury. However, indirect impacts also seriously affect development, although they are often unnoticed because they are hidden. A framework for assessing these direct and indirect impacts is outlined. Historically, reducing impacts has focussed on containing the supply of weapons. However, the report argues that it is essential to link this with a demand-side approach that addresses the root causes of conflict. This ties disarmament into broader human development issues.
The report finds that small arms multiply the effects of internal conflict. Combined with other risk factors, such as social marginalisation or systemic poverty, they create self- perpetuating cycles of violence. The main indirect impacts of small arms are:
It is essential for development interventions to address both the supply of, and demand for, small arms. The policy implications of this include:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Muggah, R. and Batchelor, P. 2002, 'Development Held Hostage: Assessing the Effects of Small Arms on Human Development - A Preliminary Study of the Socio-Economic Impacts and Development Linkages of Small Arms Proliferation, Availability and Use', report, the United Nations Development Programme, New York
Author:
Peter Batchelor
, bcpr@undp.org
United Nations Development Program (UNDP), http://www.undp.org/
Organisation: United Nations Development Program (UNDP), http://www.undp.org/