Faith-Based Organizations, Community Development, and Room of Manoeuvre in Gang Controlled Neighbourhoods in San Salvador

This paper aims to contribute to our understanding of the feasibility and effectiveness of development interventions in situations of chronic violence, paying particular attention to the capacity and room of manoeuvre of intervening organisations in contexts where illicit groups have built up a powe...

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Main Author: Chris van der Borgh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LSE Press 2021-02-01
Series:Journal of Illicit Economies and Development
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jied.lse.ac.uk/articles/56
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spelling doaj-38d0604cd4d8439aafab9ae3cd5aca1d2021-10-08T13:41:01ZengLSE PressJournal of Illicit Economies and Development2516-72272021-02-012210.31389/jied.5653Faith-Based Organizations, Community Development, and Room of Manoeuvre in Gang Controlled Neighbourhoods in San SalvadorChris van der Borgh0Utrecht UniversityThis paper aims to contribute to our understanding of the feasibility and effectiveness of development interventions in situations of chronic violence, paying particular attention to the capacity and room of manoeuvre of intervening organisations in contexts where illicit groups have built up a power position. It analyses the interventions of two faith-based NGOs (FBOs) that aim to reduce violence and promote community development in selected gang-controlled neighbourhoods of the Metropolitan Area of San Salvador (AMSS). Based on a literature study and data from fieldwork in several municipalities of the AMSS, it focuses on the ways the organisations navigate in extremely complex contexts. It is argued that the factors that contribute to the capacity of the FBOs to work in gang controlled neighbourhoods include their evangelical identity, the acceptance by and independence from gang and government, their longer-term engagement in selected neighbourhoods, and the combination of social interventions that have a local impact (education, healthcare) with the promotion of moral values. The paper also discusses some of the dilemmas and limitations of these kinds of approaches.https://jied.lse.ac.uk/articles/56gangschronic violencepolicypreventionngos
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chris van der Borgh
spellingShingle Chris van der Borgh
Faith-Based Organizations, Community Development, and Room of Manoeuvre in Gang Controlled Neighbourhoods in San Salvador
Journal of Illicit Economies and Development
gangs
chronic violence
policy
prevention
ngos
author_facet Chris van der Borgh
author_sort Chris van der Borgh
title Faith-Based Organizations, Community Development, and Room of Manoeuvre in Gang Controlled Neighbourhoods in San Salvador
title_short Faith-Based Organizations, Community Development, and Room of Manoeuvre in Gang Controlled Neighbourhoods in San Salvador
title_full Faith-Based Organizations, Community Development, and Room of Manoeuvre in Gang Controlled Neighbourhoods in San Salvador
title_fullStr Faith-Based Organizations, Community Development, and Room of Manoeuvre in Gang Controlled Neighbourhoods in San Salvador
title_full_unstemmed Faith-Based Organizations, Community Development, and Room of Manoeuvre in Gang Controlled Neighbourhoods in San Salvador
title_sort faith-based organizations, community development, and room of manoeuvre in gang controlled neighbourhoods in san salvador
publisher LSE Press
series Journal of Illicit Economies and Development
issn 2516-7227
publishDate 2021-02-01
description This paper aims to contribute to our understanding of the feasibility and effectiveness of development interventions in situations of chronic violence, paying particular attention to the capacity and room of manoeuvre of intervening organisations in contexts where illicit groups have built up a power position. It analyses the interventions of two faith-based NGOs (FBOs) that aim to reduce violence and promote community development in selected gang-controlled neighbourhoods of the Metropolitan Area of San Salvador (AMSS). Based on a literature study and data from fieldwork in several municipalities of the AMSS, it focuses on the ways the organisations navigate in extremely complex contexts. It is argued that the factors that contribute to the capacity of the FBOs to work in gang controlled neighbourhoods include their evangelical identity, the acceptance by and independence from gang and government, their longer-term engagement in selected neighbourhoods, and the combination of social interventions that have a local impact (education, healthcare) with the promotion of moral values. The paper also discusses some of the dilemmas and limitations of these kinds of approaches.
topic gangs
chronic violence
policy
prevention
ngos
url https://jied.lse.ac.uk/articles/56
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