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Date: November 22, 2024 Fri
Time: 11:35 am
Time: 11:35 am
Results for homicide (colombia)
2 results foundAuthor: Poveda, Alexander Cotte Title: Poverty, Armed Conflict and Human Rights: An Analysis of the Objective Causes of Violence in Colombia Summary: This work analyses the influence of economic variables, poverty and armed conflict on violence in Colombia. For this purpose, a time series method is used to analyse economic and social data through which different long-term coefficients are estimated in order to determine the effects of these variables on violence in Colombia from 1950 to 2006. Socioeconomic characteristics, poverty and variables associated with armed conflict affect the dynamics of violence, and moreover, there are various political variables that have a notable influence upon the determinants of violence in Colombia. More precisely, variables associated with a lack of state presence in some regions and educational aspects are determinant factors that influence the incidence of violence in the country. Details: Bogota, Colombia: Universidad de la Salle, Investigation Group on Violence, Institutions and Economic Development, 2010. 50p. Source: Internet Resource Year: 2010 Country: Colombia URL: Shelf Number: 118567 Keywords: Drug Trafficking (Colombia)Homicide (Colombia)PovertyViolence (Colombia) |
Author: Garcia, Juan Felipe Title: Police Reform, Training and Crime: Experimental Evidence from Colombia's Plan Cuadrantes Summary: The Plan Nacional de Vigilancia Comunitaria por Cuadrantes (PNVCC) is a new police patrolling program introduced in the eight major cities of Colombia in 2010 by the National Police. The strategy divides the largest cities into small geographical areas (cuadrantes), assigns six policemen to each, establishes a new patrolling protocol involving more community contact, and holds officers accountable for crime in their assigned area. The plan warranted a comprehensive training program for over 9,000 police officers aimed at improving interpersonal skills and implementation of the new patrolling protocols. By staggering the training schedule between three randomly chosen cohorts of police stations, we generate experimental variation in the exposure to training and in the effective implementation of the new police protocols induced by the Plan Cuadrantes. Comparing the 4 months immediately after training with the same months from the previous year, we find a significant reduction in several types of crime attributable to the training program, ranging from around .13 of a standard deviation for homicides to .18 of a standard deviation for brawls. These impacts are driven by very large effects in high crime areas and very small -or zero- effects in low crime neighborhoods. Once we take into account the high spatial concentration of crime, the estimated effects account for an overall reduction in the number of homicides of about 22%. We suggest that the training program affected crime by increasing the patrol police's sense of accountability to the population and also possibly through higher police motivation. Large efficiency gains in public service provision may be attainable with relatively inexpensive interventions that bring public servants closer to their clients. Details: Caracas, Venezuela: CAF Development Bank of Latin America, 2013. 31p. Source: CAF Working Papers: Internet Resource: Accessed June 11, 2014 at http://www.caf.com/media/4243/police_reform_training_crime_experimental_evidence_colombia.pdf Year: 2013 Country: Colombia URL: http://www.caf.com/media/4243/police_reform_training_crime_experimental_evidence_colombia.pdf Shelf Number: 132438 Keywords: Crime Reduction Homicide (Colombia)Police Patrol (Colombia) Police Reform (Colombia) |