Enquête nationale sur les armes légères et de petit calibre en Côte d'Ivoire: les défis du contrôle des armes et de la lutte contre la violence armée avant la crise post-électorale (Special Report 14)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 24 November, 2020

L’instabilité sous-régionale, le conflit, l’émergence des groupes armés, l’affaiblissement du système sécuritaire et la criminalité armée sont autant de facteurs qui ont encouragé la prolifération et la circulation illicite d’armes légères et de petit calibre en Côte d’Ivoire. Cette importante circulation d’armes contribue à exacerber les conséquences des manifestations de la violence.

In Transit: Gangs and Criminal Networks in Guyana (Working Paper 11)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 24 November, 2020

Since 2000, Guyana has seen a rise in violent crime associated with gangs and organized crime syndicates, which have created drug and weapon problems in the country. Cocaine, trafficked from neighbouring Venezuela, is transited through Guyana en route to Europe and the United States. Gangs also utilize the country’s porous borders with Brazil, a major weapons manufacturer, to smuggle arms into Guyana and ship them to other countries in the Caribbean.

Private Security Companies’ Firearms Stockpiles (Research Note 4)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 24 November, 2020

The private security industry has come under considerable international scrutiny due to the highly publicized role it has played in Afghanistan and Iraq (2011). Attention has mostly focused on questions concerning governmental oversight and these companies’ accountability. Research Note 4: Private Security Companies’ Firearms Stockpiles —based on a forthcoming chapter from the Small Arms Survey 2011 yearbook—examines private security company (PSC) firearm holdings: their scale and variation across settings.

Timor-Leste Armed Violence Assessment Final Report (Special Report 12)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 24 November, 2020

A little more than a decade after independence and the violence and displacement that accompanied it, Timor-Leste remains a country in transition. While it has stabilized in the post-independence period, the after-effects of the 2006 crisis continue to play an important role in the political debate and security atmosphere in the country. Communal violence remains at times a feature of life in rural areas, and small arms—left over from the pre-independence period and more recently leaked from defence and police forces—sometimes fuel both gang-related and community violence.

Voicing Concern: Surveying People's Priorities in Violent Settings (Issue Brief 15)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 24 November, 2020

At the initiative of United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, the World Humanitarian Summit (WHS) will take place in May 2016 in Istanbul, Turkey. A central objective of the process is to ‘redefine how the global community delivers for the world’s most vulnerable people’,  living in areas affected by armed conflict and disasters.