Summary information

Study title

Understanding the tipping point of urban conflict: Violence, cities, and poverty reduction in the developing world

Creator

Moser, C, The University of Manchester

Study number / PID

850734 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-850734 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

Urban violence is an increasingly significant global phenomenon. Over the past few years, a conventional wisdom has emerged within policy and research circles associating it with four key factors:poverty, youthful populations, the failure to consider women’s safety as a specific concern, and the local-level absence of the state. Taken together, these different factors have underpinned a range of policy interventions in a variety of contexts. Urban violence has nevertheless continued to proliferate, suggesting that the conventional wisdom underlying such violence-reduction interventions may be flawed. The proposed research project aims to re-think conventional assumptions and offer new insights into the determinants of urban violence, including in particular identifying context-specific circumstances under which everyday urban conflict becomes violent. The study will focus on four specific cities in Asia, Africa, and Latin America: Dili (Timor Leste), Patna (India), Nairobi (Kenya), and Santiago (Chile). A key hypothesis is that urban conflict "tips" into overt violence principally as a result of qualitatively-specific "violence chains" rather than the quantitative factors. The project therefore aims to identify entry points to break linkages in these chains and foster new violence-reduction strategies both within poor urban communities and at the metropolitan level.

Keywords

Methodology

Data collection period

01/09/2010 - 31/08/2012

Country

World Wide

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Geographic Unit

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Numeric

Data collection mode

Two of the case studies used participatory urban appraisal (PUA) methodology - as developed by the PI, Caroline Moser. The other two case studies used semi-structured interviews.

Funding information

Grant number

RES-167-25-0483

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2013

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.

Related publications

Not available