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                   World Development Report
                   2011 Conflict, Security, and Development
                   
                   
                   With more than 1.5 billion people living in countries affected by confl ict, the
World Development Report 2011 (WDR) looks into the changing nature of violence
in the 21st century. Interstate and civil wars characterized violent confl ict in the
last century; more pronounced today is violence linked to local disputes, political
repression, and organized crime. The Report underlines the negative impact of
persistent confl ict on a country’s or a region’s development prospects, and notes
that no low-income, confl ict-affected state has yet achieved a single Millennium
Development Goal. 
The risk of major violence is greatest when high levels of stress combine with
weak and illegitimate national institutions. Societies are vulnerable when their
institutions are unable to protect citizens from abuse, or to provide equitable
access to justice and to economic opportunity. These vulnerabilities are exacerbated
in countries with high youth unemployment, growing income inequality,
and perceptible injustice. Externally driven events such as infi ltration by foreign
combatants, the presence of traffi cking networks, or economic shocks add to the
stresses that can provoke violence. 
The WDR 2011 draws on the experiences of countries that have successfully
managed to transition away from repetitive violence, pointing to a specific
need to prioritize actions that build confi dence between states and citizens,
and develop institutions that can provide security, justice, and jobs. Government
capacity is central, but technical competence alone is insufficient: institutions and
programs must be accountable to their citizens if they are to acquire legitimacy.
Impunity, corruption, and human rights abuses undermine confi dence between
states and citizens and increase the risks of violence. Building resilient institutions
occurs in multiple transitions over a generation, and does not mean converging
on Western institutional models. 
The WDR 2011 draws together lessons from national reformers escaping from
repetitive cycles of violence. It advocates a greater focus on continuous
preventive action, balancing a sometimes excessive concentration on postconfl
ict reconstruction. The Report is based on new research, case studies,
and extensive consultations with leaders and other actors throughout the
world. It proposes a toolkit of options for addressing violence that can be
adapted to local contexts, as well as new directions for international policy
intended to improve support for national reformers and to tackle stresses that
emanate from global or regional trends beyond any one country’s control.
                     
                   
                   
  
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      | World
        Development Report 2011 - Final files, April , 2011
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       Contents 
       Foreword
        ,  Acknowledgments, Glossary, Methodological Note, Abbreviations
        and Data Notes 
       Overview 
        
        Preamble
        1 
        Part 1:
        The Challenge of Repeated Cycles of Violence 
       21st-century
        conflict and violence are a development problem that does not fit the
        20th-century mold 
       Vicious
        cycles of conflict: When security, justice, and employment stresses
        meet weak institutions 
       Part 2: A
        Roadmap for Breaking Cycles of Violence at the Country Level 
       Restoring
        confi dence and transforming the institutions that provide citizen
        security, justice, and jobs 
       Practical
        policy and program tools for country actors  
       Part 3:
        Reducing the Risks of Violence—Directions for International Policy 
       Track 1:
        Providing specialized assistance for prevention through citizen
        security, justice, and jobs  
       Track 2:
        Transforming procedures and risk and results management in international
        agencies 
       Track 3:
        Acting regionally and globally to reduce external stresses on fragile
        states 
       Track 4:
        Marshaling support from lower-, middle-, and higher-income countries and
        global and regional institutions to reflect the changing landscape of
        international policy and assistance 
       Notes
        WDR Framework and
        Structure
  
        
       Part 1: The
        Challenge
         
       1 Repeated
        Violence Threatens Development
         
        
       Interstate and civil wars have declined since peaking in
        the early 1990s  
  
       Modern violence comes in various forms and repeated
        cycles  
        
       The developmental consequences of violence are severe  
        
       Repeated violence is a shared challenge 
       Notes  
       
       2 Vulnerability to Violence 
       
       Multiple stresses raise the risks of violence 
       
       The vicious cycle of weak institutional legitimacy and
        violence 
       
       Notes 
      
       Part 2: Lessons from National and International 
       Responses  
      
       3 From violence to resilience: Restoring confidence and 
       transforming institutions  
      
       Why transforming institutions is so difficult 
    
       Escaping violence, developing resilience  
     
       Do not expect too much, too soon 
      
       Adapt to different contexts  
    
       Notes 
  
       
       4 Restoring confi dence: Moving away from the brink  
      
       Drawing on lessons from national reformers 
     
       Inclusive-enough coalitions 
     
       Delivering early results 
      
       Notes 
     
       5 Transforming institutions to deliver citizen security,
        justice, and jobs  
      
       Pacing and sequencing institutional transformation 
   
       Citizen security  
      
       Justice 
      
       Jobs 
   
       What to do systematically but gradually  
    
       Institutional transformation as a continuous process 
       
       Notes 
       
       6 International support to building confi dence and 
       transforming institutions  
      
       The promise and peril of outside support 
       The evolving international architecture 
       Building confidence 
       Supporting institutional transformation 
       Dual accountability and managing the risks of action 
       Lessons of international engagement 
       Notes 
       
       7 International action to mitigate external stresses  
    
       External security stresses 
       External economic stresses 
       Resource stresses 
       Between the global and the national: Regional stresses, regional support 
       Notes 
       Part 3: Practical Options and Recommendations  
      
       8 Practical country directions and options  
  
       Principles and options, not recipes 
       Basic principles and country-specifi c frameworks for sustained violence prevention and recovery 
       Practical approaches to confidence-building 
       Program approaches to link early results to transforming institutions 
       External factors: Reducing external stresses and mobilizing external support 
       Notes 
      
       9 New directions for international support  
    
       Track 1: Preventing repeated cycles of violence by investing in citizen security, justice, and jobs 
       Track 2: Reforming internal agency procedures 
       Track 3: Reducing external stresses: New regional and global action 
       Track 4: Marshaling support from lower-, middle-, and higher-income countries and from global and regional institutions 
       A continuing global learning platform 
       Notes  
     
       Bibliographical Note  
        
       References  
   
       Selected Indicators  
      
       Selected World Development Indicators  
    
        Index 
       
               
           
        
           
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