Monographie

Violence without borders : the internationalization of crime and conflict / The World Bank

  • Texte
  • sans médiation
  • Volume
  • Violence without borders : the internationalization of crime and conflict / The World Bank
  • Washington : The World Bank
  • C 2020
  • 1 vol. (xviii-124 p.) : graph., tabl, couv. ill. ; 24 cm
  • Policy research report
  • 978-1-4648-1452-5
  • 9781464814525 br.
  • A World Bank policy research report 1020-0851
  • 364.106
  • "This Policy Research Report was authored by a team comprising Muhammad Faisal Ali Baig, Quy-Toan Do, Daniel Garrote-Sanchez, Lakshmi Iyer, Chau Le, and Andrei Levchenko ... The report is sponsored by the World Bank's Development Research Group" (remerciements)
  • Bibliogr. en fin de chapitres.
  • Front Cover Contents Foreword Acknowledgments Executive Summary Abbreviations Overview Notes Reference Chapter 1 Crime, Conflict, and Violence without Borders Armed conflict Transnational terrorism Illicit markets Conclusion Annex1A The geographic dispersion of refugees Notes References Chapter 2 Transborder Determinants of Crime, Conflict, and Violence The theoretical framework Transborder drivers of conflict, crime, and violence Can violence be avoided? Foreign military interventions and development assistance Conclusion Annex 2A Contest model Notes References Chapter 3 Security in a Globalized World Third-party interventions to prevent violence When will other countries intervene in conflict situations? Limits to the effectiveness of third-party interventions Multilateralism and the delegation of foreign interventions Concluding remarks and policy recommendations Annex 3A The determinants of foreign interventions in civil conflict Notes References Boxes Box 1.1 The gaps and data limitations of datasets on armed conflicts Box 2.1 Sanctions Box 2.2 Anti-money laundering and combatting the financing of terrorism Figures Figure 1.1 Armed conflicts: Incidence and fatalities, by type, 1989-2017 Figure 1.2 State-based armed conflicts, by type, 1946-2017 Figure 1.3 All armed conflicts, by type, 1989-2017 Figure 1.4 Global refugee population, 1951-2017 Figure 1.5 Average distance traveled by a refugee, 1987-2017 Figure 1.6 Share of refugees going to a contiguous country, 1987-2017 Figure 1.7 Mean Herfindahl index of destinations, five-year moving average, 1991-2017 Figure 1.8 Terrorist attacks and fatalities worldwide, 1970-2017 Figure 1.9 Transnational terrorist attacks and fatalities, 1970-2017 Figure 1.10 Cultivation and production of illicit narcotics, 1986-2017 Figure 1.11 Trends in detection of human trafficking, 2003-16 Figure 1.12 Domestic poaching incidents and transnational seizures Figure 1.13 Piracy attacks, 1991-2018 Figure 1A.1 Average distance traveled by a refugee, five-year moving average, 1991-2017 Figure 1A.2 Share of refugees going to a contiguous country, five-year moving average, 1991-2017 Figure 1A.3 Refugees fleeing to wealthy OECD and European countries, five-year moving average Figure 2.1 Equilibrium in a contest game Figure 2.2 Determinants of violence in the contest success function model Figure 2.3 Contest game and the cone of possible resource allocations Figure 3.1 Trends in United Nations peacekeeping operations and global aid flows, 1947-2017 Figure 3.2 Intrastate wars and the number of foreign countries intervening, 1990-2017 Figure 3.3 Likelihood of foreign interventions over time, 1990-2017 Figure 3.4 Drivers of foreign interventions in civil wars Figure 3.5 Probability that a war will continue and probability of foreign intervention, by length of war
  • La 4e de couv. indique : "Just like nearly every aspect of human experience, crime, conflict, and violence have become increasingly global. Around the world, civil wars, of which there are more today than at any time since the end of World War II, displace greater numbers of people ever farther from their countries of origin. Transnational terrorism has reached a 50-year high, in terms of both its incidence and the number of reported fatalities. Cross-border criminal markets-- illicit drugs, human trafficking, wildlife trade, and so forth-- take a heavy toll on the many societies they affect. This publication offers a unified framework to take stock of the theoretical and empirical literature on crime, conflict, and violence and to discuss how the international community organizes itself to address security as a regional and global public good. The increasingly global effects of crime and conflict require an equally global response to violence."
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