posted on 2024-09-05, 22:14authored byJaideep Gupte
Violence in cities significantly compromises development and can have
detrimental consequences for peace-building and political settlements in both
conflict and non-conflict settings. A majority of the world’s most fragile and
conflict-affected countries are rapidly urbanising, while much of the global burden
of armed violence can be directly or indirectly linked to cities. As such, urban
environments interact with the mechanics of security provision in significant and
complex ways. Implementing effective violence mitigation strategies therefore
requires stakeholders to acknowledge varying types of urban violence, understand
how these interact with the mechanics of security provision, and thereby bring
a spatially relevant, city-specific thinking to the wider understandings of the
arrangements by which political power is organised and exercised.
Funding
UK Department for International Development
History
Publisher
IDS
Citation
Gupte, J. (2016) 'Rethinking Approaches to Peace-Building and Political Settlements in an Increasingly Urbanised World', IDS Policy Briefing 112, Brighton: IDS