Security Threats Affecting People Exiting Criminal Groups in Colombia
Cárdenas, Javier, Downing, Cristal and Vélez, Juanita (2022). Security Threats Affecting People Exiting Criminal Groups in Colombia. MEAC Findings Reports. United Nations University.
Document type:
Report
Collection:
-
Attached Files (Some files may be inaccessible until you login with your UNU Collections credentials) Name Description MIMEType Size Downloads GAOSecurityRisks_FINAL.pdf GAOSecurityRisks_FINAL.pdf application/pdf; Bytes GAOSecurityRisks_SP_FINAL.pdf GAOSecurityRisks_SP_FINAL.pdf application/pdf; Bytes -
Author Cárdenas, Javier
Downing, Cristal
Vélez, JuanitaTitle Security Threats Affecting People Exiting Criminal Groups in Colombia Series Title MEAC Findings Reports Volume/Issue No. 19 Publication Date 2022-11-06 Place of Publication New York Publisher United Nations University Pages 13 Language eng Abstract This report is based on data collected as part of original survey research conducted with individuals formerly associated with criminal groups – including FARC dissident groups – who were interviewed between April and September 2022. This survey took place thanks to the cooperation agreement established between MEAC and the Reincorporation and Normalization Agency (ARN by its Spanish acronym) in Colombia; MEAC is grateful to the ARN for its collaboration in this work. The interviews took place in three cities in Colombia – Bogotá, Medellín, and Cali – where the ex-associates were participating in the differential assistance process led by the ARN. The survey inquired about their conflict experiences and their transition to civil life, economic situation, personal security, psychosocial vulnerabilities, and support networks. This report focuses on security threats that affect the exit process in ways that could increase the likelihood of recidivism and decrease the likelihood that participants make full, sustained, and positive transitions to civilian life. If this process is unable to support successful transitions out of armed groups, it will not achieve the goal of winnowing the ranks of – and ultimate dismantling – active armed groups. These findings may be useful to the Colombian government and other governments, UN, and NGO partners working to address conflict and build peace amidst the changing landscape of insecurity and vulnerability in Colombia. The report ends with an examination of key policy and programmatic implications of these findings. UNBIS Thesaurus CONFLICT MANAGEMENT
COLOMBIA
ARMED CONFLICTS
PEACEBUILDINGKeyword Colombia
FARC
Armed groupsCopyright Holder United Nations University Copyright Year 2022 Copyright type Creative commons ISBN 9789280865806 -
Citation counts Search Google Scholar Access Statistics: 169 Abstract Views, 443 File Downloads - Detailed Statistics Created: Mon, 07 Nov 2022, 02:38:09 JST by Jack Durrell on behalf of UNU Centre