Today, over 2 billion people live in lagging and violent lands with the processes of economic isolation and violence closely linked. In Africa, close to 600 million people live within 90 minutes of violence. The issue of "
lagging lands, violent lands" was examined at a World Bank seminar on April 22. The session focused on identifying options for stimulating sustainable and inclusive economic growth in lagging lands and urban spaces to bridge economic and social divisions and mitigate conflict and human vulnerability. An
integrated policy framework combining the main thrusts of the World Development Report (WDR) 2009 on Reshaping Economic Geography and the WDR 2011 on Conflict, Security, and Development was at the core of diagnosing challenges and identifying solutions.
There is need for urgent action toward a global solution to leave no area behind because persistent spatial disparities in living standards can adversely affect national unity and social cohesion, foster political instability, and increase the risk of conflict. In identifying priorities, it is essential to remind ourselves that leaving no area behind is NOT equal to “doing the same everywhere.” And to advance on the lagging areas agenda, we must recognize that the heterogeneity of challenges across territories needs to be met with a heterogeneity of policy instruments. To leave no area behind, each local challenge needs to be matched with a specific set of policy instruments. Policies should seek unity, NOT uniformity.
Strengthening the link between research and policy for a combined agenda is critical. Georeferenced data provides a tremendous opportunity for analysis of risk factors. In East Africa, for example, the issue of lagging lands is addressed by work in high-risk and conflict-affected areas, by addressing the underlying drivers of vulnerability and by reducing exposure to hazards of people. In the Horn of Africa, the EU has successfully applied geographical targeting in cross-border areas across the region, collaboration across borders through specific actions, and a regional approach based on research and evidence. In Cali, Colombia, the “Territories of Inclusion and Opportunities,” a land-based strategy addressing multiple risk factors, has been a successful tool in combating poverty, exclusion and violence.
View tweets from the session below. Click here to learn more about other events on building sustainable communities during the 2017 World Bank-IMF Spring Meetings .
There is need for urgent action toward a global solution to leave no area behind because persistent spatial disparities in living standards can adversely affect national unity and social cohesion, foster political instability, and increase the risk of conflict. In identifying priorities, it is essential to remind ourselves that leaving no area behind is NOT equal to “doing the same everywhere.” And to advance on the lagging areas agenda, we must recognize that the heterogeneity of challenges across territories needs to be met with a heterogeneity of policy instruments. To leave no area behind, each local challenge needs to be matched with a specific set of policy instruments. Policies should seek unity, NOT uniformity.
Strengthening the link between research and policy for a combined agenda is critical. Georeferenced data provides a tremendous opportunity for analysis of risk factors. In East Africa, for example, the issue of lagging lands is addressed by work in high-risk and conflict-affected areas, by addressing the underlying drivers of vulnerability and by reducing exposure to hazards of people. In the Horn of Africa, the EU has successfully applied geographical targeting in cross-border areas across the region, collaboration across borders through specific actions, and a regional approach based on research and evidence. In Cali, Colombia, the “Territories of Inclusion and Opportunities,” a land-based strategy addressing multiple risk factors, has been a successful tool in combating poverty, exclusion and violence.
View tweets from the session below. Click here to learn more about other events on building sustainable communities during the 2017 World Bank-IMF Spring Meetings .
Citizens in conflict-affected areas are also likely to be poor. #EndPoverty for all. #Dev4Peace
— World Bank Cities (@WBG_Cities) April 22, 2017
Very very likely. Protracted conflict is big driver of impoverishment. The "war poor" are huge challenge #EndPoverty #Dev4Peace @WorldBank https://t.co/yiuDDneC1s
— Hugo Slim (@HSlimICRC) April 22, 2017
Timothy Besley from @LSE talking on lagging lands, violent lands: latent violence very important in policy analysis @WBG_Dev4Peace
— Ede Ijjasz-Vásquez (@Ede_WBG) April 22, 2017
@djomtzigt talking on lagging lands violent lands @WorldBank: 93% or extreme poor live in conflict or environmental crisis areas
— Ede Ijjasz-Vásquez (@Ede_WBG) April 22, 2017
Unity NOT Uniformity #Dev4Peace pic.twitter.com/7yFVIl6Gog
— Nancy Lozano (@nlginspace) April 22, 2017
Discussing solutions to stimulate inclusive economic growth in urban spaces to bridge economic + social divs & mitigate #conflict #Dev4Peace pic.twitter.com/B0qvozyzdj
— Lois Goh (@loislamode) April 22, 2017
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