Marginalisation of the majority world

A complex interplay of discrimination, global poverty, inequality and deepening socio-economic divisions, together make for key elements of global insecurity. While overall global wealth has increased, the benefits of this economic growth have not been equally shared. The rich-poor divide is actually growing, with a very heavy concentration of growth in relatively few parts of the world, and poverty getting much worse in many other regions. The ‘majority world’ of Asia, Africa and Latin America feel the strongest effects of marginalisation as a result of global elites, concentrated in North America and Europe, striving to maintain political, cultural, economic and military global dominance.

Exploring the security implications of climate change in South Asia - International Alert co-hosts South Asia Climate and Security Expert Roundtable in Dhaka

Janani Vivekananda | International Alert | April 2010

Issues:Climate change, Competition over resources, Marginalisation

International Alert, together with the Bangladesh Institute for Peace and Security Studies (BIPSS) and  the Regional Centre for Security Studies and the Peacebuilding and Development Institute in Sri Lanka, co-hosted an expert roundtable on the Security Implications of Climate Change in South Asia in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 29th-30th March 2010.

The two-day event brought together experts from Bangladesh, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka for an important regional exchange on issues related to climate change and security. International Alert’s recent work on climate change, fragility and conflict has shown that the security implications of climate change are a very real but relatively unexplored issue worldwide and in this region. This event marked the start of a significant process, creating a space for a critical discussion on the interlinkages between climate change and conflict in South Asia.

 

Source: International Alert

Image source: Orangeadnan

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Turning swords into ploughshares: Environmental degradation and water poverty are reaching a tipping point after which serious instability and suffering will be unavoidable

Prince El Hassan Bin Talal, Chairman of the West Asia-North Africa Forum | www.gulfnews.com | April 2010

Issues:Climate change, Competition over resources, Marginalisation

Good news does not sell newspapers. Nor, it seems, does the idea of respect for human dignity. In West Asia, where the majority of people have known little other than outright war or simmering conflict, it should come as little surprise that people have lost their faith in the possibility of real peace. Real peace can be a frightening prospect; it means burying the hatchet and beating swords into the proverbial ploughshares. No easy task when we are all burdened by historical and psychological baggage.

Source: www.gulfnews.com

Image source: Nino Jose Heredia/Gulf News

 

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How small arms and light weapons proliferation undermines security and development

Rachel Stohl, EJ Hodendoorn | Center for American Progress | March 2010

Issues:Global militarisation, Marginalisation

The proliferation of small arms and light weapons is an immediate security challenge to individuals, societies, and states around the world and an enormous hurdle to sustainable security and development.

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New Report Highlights the Links between Poverty, Marginalisation and Terrorism

Lia Brynjar with Skjølberg Katja | Norwegian Defence Research Establishment | March 2010

Issue:Marginalisation

New Report Highlights the Links between Poverty, Marginalisation and Terrorism

A new report by the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment providing a critical survey of the academic literature on the causes of terrorism  demonstrates the link between marginalisation and levels of political violence and terrorism.

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Reimagining Development

Issue:Marginalisation

 A new initiative of the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex brings together 34 research projects exploring whether crises in food, finance, fuel and climate -  and the way that people are responding to then - present us with an opportunity to rethink or 'reimagine' what international development means and how it needs to change.

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The New Faces of Violence and War: Peace and Security Challenges

Issue:Marginalisation

In this recent article, Mariano Aguirre, Director of the Norwegian Peacebuilding Centre in Oslo, examines the complex and unpredictable challenges to peace and security.

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