“Violence as a Contributor to Poverty,” Expert Reflections from Thinkers, Practitioners, and Activists, ACRONYM, published by WFUNA (the World Federation of United Nations Associations)

Pogge, Thomas W (2014) “Violence as a Contributor to Poverty,” Expert Reflections from Thinkers, Practitioners, and Activists, ACRONYM, published by WFUNA (the World Federation of United Nations Associations). Peaceful Societies: An Essential Element of Sustainable Development, 3 (1). p. 32.

[thumbnail of Version of Record] PDF (Version of Record) - Published Version
Restricted to Repository staff only

1MB

Official URL: https://www.wfuna.org

Abstract

Participating in a research project on how poor people themselves conceive poverty, I was surprised by the great emphasis our interlocutors put on violence.1 Being exposed to violence in one’s own household and daily life is a prominent and pervasive part of what it means to be poor. Such violence reflects governance failures endemic in developing countries: predatory elites who do not care about their poor compatriots and even profit by driving them off their land or coercing them into exploitative conditions as factory workers, day laborers, domestic servants or sex workers. Small-scale violence and the continual threat thereof—just like the large-scale violence of wars, civil wars and local insurrections—is a terrible burden upon the poor and a grave impediment to efforts to improve their lives. The Sustainable Development Goals must recognize and suitably highlight this reality.


Repository Staff Only: item control page