Violence in a post-conflict context : urban poor perceptions from Guatemala

Bibliographic Information

Violence in a post-conflict context : urban poor perceptions from Guatemala

Caroline Moser, Cathy McIlwaine

(Conflict prevention and post-conflict reconstruction)

Latin America and Caribbean Region, Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development Sector Management Unit, World Bank, c2001

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Note

Bibliography: p. 161-163

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In 1996, the Government of Guatemala and the guerrilla army known as the Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity (URNG), signed the final Peace Accords ending both the United Nations monitored peace process and 36 years of internal conflict. This civil war caused untold internal and external displacement in the region as well as the deaths of over 150,000 people, the majority of whom were from indigenous groups. The legacy of this conflict which includes increasing urban violence, social exclusion, and weak levels of social capital, presents challenges for the country's post-conflict peace-building agenda. Violence in a Post-Conflict Context addresses the perceptions of violence by the people living in poor communities in Guatemala. It provides the results of a participatory study of violence conducted in urban low-income communities. The book identifies the categories of violence affecting poor communities, the costs of different types of violence, the effects of violence on social capital, the interventions employed by people to deal with the violence, and the causes and effects of social exclusion. Violence in a Post-Conflict Context incorporates the rarely heard voices of the poor by using the participatory appraisal methodology which emphasizes local knowledge and enables locals to make their own analysis of the problems that they face and identify their own solutions.

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