<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>Urban violence is an increasingly significant global phenomenon. Over the past few years, a conventional wisdom has emerged within policy and research circles associating it with four key factors:poverty, youthful populations, the failure to consider women’s safety as a specific concern, and the local-level absence of the state. Taken together, these different factors have underpinned a range of policy interventions in a variety of contexts. Urban violence has nevertheless continued to proliferate, suggesting that the conventional wisdom underlying such violence-reduction interventions may be flawed. The proposed research project aims to re-think conventional assumptions and offer new insights...
Rapid urbanisation in the global South has prompted attention to the causes and dynamics of urban vi...
There is growing interest in the impact of violence on development and on ‘security’ as a policy res...
The process of urbanisation has historically been associated with both socioeconomic development and...
Over the past decade, accelerating rates of violence and crime in Latin American cities have transfo...
The world is currently undergoing the largest wave of urban growth in history. Most of this urban gr...
French version available in IDRC Digital LibrarySpanish version available in IDRC Digital LibraryThe...
Violence in cities significantly compromises development and can have detrimental consequences for ...
Rates of urbanization are incredibly high in developing countries; this growth can produce opportuni...
As densely populated urban centres emerge as economic powerhouses where global GDP is concentrated, ...
In recent years, cities in countries such as Syria, Ukraine, and Somalia have been sites of major in...
In recent years, cities in countries such as Syria, Ukraine, and Somalia have been sites of major in...
Mumbai and Nairobi have acutely unequal urban development, with respectively 40 per cent and 60 per...
The rise of the fragile city in the last 20 years has contributed to higher concentrations of povert...
Violence in cities significantly compromises development and can have detrimental consequences for ...
Latin America is one of the world’s most violent regions, with 40 of the 50 most violent cities, but...
Rapid urbanisation in the global South has prompted attention to the causes and dynamics of urban vi...
There is growing interest in the impact of violence on development and on ‘security’ as a policy res...
The process of urbanisation has historically been associated with both socioeconomic development and...
Over the past decade, accelerating rates of violence and crime in Latin American cities have transfo...
The world is currently undergoing the largest wave of urban growth in history. Most of this urban gr...
French version available in IDRC Digital LibrarySpanish version available in IDRC Digital LibraryThe...
Violence in cities significantly compromises development and can have detrimental consequences for ...
Rates of urbanization are incredibly high in developing countries; this growth can produce opportuni...
As densely populated urban centres emerge as economic powerhouses where global GDP is concentrated, ...
In recent years, cities in countries such as Syria, Ukraine, and Somalia have been sites of major in...
In recent years, cities in countries such as Syria, Ukraine, and Somalia have been sites of major in...
Mumbai and Nairobi have acutely unequal urban development, with respectively 40 per cent and 60 per...
The rise of the fragile city in the last 20 years has contributed to higher concentrations of povert...
Violence in cities significantly compromises development and can have detrimental consequences for ...
Latin America is one of the world’s most violent regions, with 40 of the 50 most violent cities, but...
Rapid urbanisation in the global South has prompted attention to the causes and dynamics of urban vi...
There is growing interest in the impact of violence on development and on ‘security’ as a policy res...
The process of urbanisation has historically been associated with both socioeconomic development and...