Militarism, militarization, health and the Third World.

A B Zwi
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

This paper examines the relationship between militarism, militarization, health and development. It draws attention to the fact that world military expenditure has continued to soar since the Second World War. Wars increasingly exact a heavy civilian toll. Third World countries are consuming, producing, and exporting more armaments than ever before. The rate of growth of military expenditure in developing countries has been far greater than their rate of growth in gross national product or in foreign economic aid. Countries under military control tend to be more repressive and to have suffered more years at war than those under civilian rule. Widespread availability of arms makes the settlement of disputes through violence more likely. Internal wars and violence are stimulated by a range of factors including inequalities in political and economic power, uneven development, and lack of popular participation in policy decisions by the majority of the population. The support of the industrialized countries for armament sales should be monitored, challenged and made politically unpalatable. Local development and regional cooperation should be stimulated. Health workers, as witnesses to the destruction to public health caused by war and violence, should play a part in advocating a reduction in the arms trade and the promotion of development in Third World countries.

军国主义,军事化,健康和第三世界。
本文考察了军国主义、军事化、健康与发展的关系。它提请注意自第二次世界大战以来世界军事开支继续飙升的事实。战争造成越来越多的平民伤亡。第三世界国家比以往任何时候都消费、生产和出口更多的武器。发展中国家军事开支的增长率远远超过其国民生产总值或外国经济援助的增长率。军事控制下的国家往往比文官统治下的国家更具压制性,遭受战争的时间也更长。武器的广泛使用使得通过暴力解决争端的可能性更大。国内战争和暴力是由一系列因素引起的,包括政治和经济权力的不平等、不平衡的发展以及大多数人口在决策中缺乏公众参与。工业化国家对武器销售的支持应受到监测、挑战并使其在政治上不受欢迎。应促进地方发展和区域合作。保健工作者作为战争和暴力对公众健康造成破坏的见证者,应该在倡导减少武器贸易和促进第三世界国家的发展方面发挥作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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