Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Contents
- About the Small Arms Survey
- Notes to readers
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Everyday Dangers: Non-conflict Armed Violence
- Chapter 2 Too Close to Home: Guns and Intimate Partner Violence
- Chapter 3 Turning Points: Gang Evolution in Nicaragua
- Chapter 4 Guns in the Family: Mafia Violence in Italy
- Chapter 5 Survival at Stake: Violent Land Conflict in Africa
- Chapter 6 Trend Lines: Armed Violence in South Africa pages 132 to 137
- Chapter 6 Trend Lines: Armed Violence in South Africa pages 137 to 159
- Chapter 7 Second Wind: The PoA's 2012 Review Conference pages 160 to 168
- Chapter 7 Second Wind: The PoA's 2012 Review Conference pages 169 to 177
- Chapter 8 Trade Update: Authorized Small Arms Transfers
- Chapter 9 Burning the Bullet: Industrial Demilitarization of Ammunition pages 186 to 199
- Chapter 9 Burning the Bullet: Industrial Demilitarization of Ammunition pages 200 to 217
- Chapter 10 ‘Infernal Machines’: Improvised Explosive Devices
- Chapter 11 Price Watch: Arms and Ammunition at Illicit Markets pages 250 to 268
- Chapter 11 Price Watch: Arms and Ammunition at Illicit Markets pages 269 to 281
- Chapter 12 Captured and Counted: Illicit Weapons in Mexico and the Philippines pages 282 to 302
- Chapter 12 Captured and Counted: Illicit Weapons in Mexico and the Philippines pages 302 to 317
- Index
Chapter 1 - Everyday Dangers: Non-conflict Armed Violence
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2014
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Contents
- About the Small Arms Survey
- Notes to readers
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Everyday Dangers: Non-conflict Armed Violence
- Chapter 2 Too Close to Home: Guns and Intimate Partner Violence
- Chapter 3 Turning Points: Gang Evolution in Nicaragua
- Chapter 4 Guns in the Family: Mafia Violence in Italy
- Chapter 5 Survival at Stake: Violent Land Conflict in Africa
- Chapter 6 Trend Lines: Armed Violence in South Africa pages 132 to 137
- Chapter 6 Trend Lines: Armed Violence in South Africa pages 137 to 159
- Chapter 7 Second Wind: The PoA's 2012 Review Conference pages 160 to 168
- Chapter 7 Second Wind: The PoA's 2012 Review Conference pages 169 to 177
- Chapter 8 Trade Update: Authorized Small Arms Transfers
- Chapter 9 Burning the Bullet: Industrial Demilitarization of Ammunition pages 186 to 199
- Chapter 9 Burning the Bullet: Industrial Demilitarization of Ammunition pages 200 to 217
- Chapter 10 ‘Infernal Machines’: Improvised Explosive Devices
- Chapter 11 Price Watch: Arms and Ammunition at Illicit Markets pages 250 to 268
- Chapter 11 Price Watch: Arms and Ammunition at Illicit Markets pages 269 to 281
- Chapter 12 Captured and Counted: Illicit Weapons in Mexico and the Philippines pages 282 to 302
- Chapter 12 Captured and Counted: Illicit Weapons in Mexico and the Philippines pages 302 to 317
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
In December 2011, Mitch Landrieu, the mayor of New Orleans, said that ‘a student attending John McDonogh [one of the city's high schools] was more likely to be killed than a soldier in Afghanistan’ (Robertson, 2011). His assessment, while partly rhetorical, pointed to an uncomfortable truth. With a homicide rate of 51 victims per 100,000 population, New Orleans residents faced greater risks than the populations of such war-torn countries as the Democratic Republic of the Congo (32 homicides per 100,000), Somalia (30 per 100,000), and Afghanistan (21 per 100,000) (Gilgen, 2011, p. 53). As counterintuitive as it may seem, fatalities due to armed violence in non-conflict settings account for the overwhelming majority of violent deaths worldwide. Between 2004 and 2009, an average of 526,000 people died violently each year, but only 10 per cent of them qualified as direct conflict deaths (p. 70).
International attention, however, has traditionally focused on interstate or civil wars. Violence that is not captured by the terms ‘armed conflict’ or ‘post-conflict’—and that does not violate international human rights law-is normally left to the relevant country to address as best it can. However, many states simply are not able to tackle the entrenched forms of non-conflict armed violence that affect them. The resulting human and economic costs to societies-and the frequent erosion of the state's legitimacy and monopoly on the use of force-have triggered a rethink of international and national policies designed to address armed violence.
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- Small Arms Survey 2013Everyday Dangers, pp. 6 - 15Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013
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