Gary A.Haugen和Victor Boutros的蝗虫效应(综述)

Q3 Social Sciences
C. Burdett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

《蝗虫效应》一开始就必须写出来,这是悲剧。发达国家不应该被困扰穷人生活的暴力所唤醒。事实上,任何社会都不应该因为将穷人遗弃在暴力的魔爪中而有罪。不幸的是,根据Gary Haugen和Victor Boutros的说法,这就是我们的现实。发达国家忽视了这一点,一心想着通过援助和经济增长来减轻贫困。与此同时,穷人继续遭受体制上的失败,使他们得不到补救。在没有正义和基本保护的情况下,他们继续成为受害者,被剥夺了人性。在这本书的开头,我们所面对的意象是故意令人震惊的。它使读者了解穷人在毁灭性暴力面前的斗争。然而,作者并没有试图让我们相信针对穷人的暴力是错误的。任何理智的人都会觉得他们的故事令人反感。相反,这本书旨在成为了解穷人现实的窗口,揭示他们与暴力之间隐藏的个人斗争,从而批评发达国家没有做的事情。这是为了激发我们对发展的思考和谈论方式的改变,同时激发紧迫感和道德愤怒。作者们将这本书的名字来源于掠夺性暴力作为一种瘟疫的概念,这种瘟疫“有摧毁一切的力量”,就像1875年摧毁美国中西部的蝗虫云(xi)。穷人特别容易受到这场瘟疫的影响,因为由于他们的经济环境,他们绝望且容易被操纵(61)。此外,穷人通常得不到保护,因为他们生活在功能失调的刑事司法系统中。作者解释说,这种动态混淆了传统的扶贫方法,并导致了一个恶性循环。大多数援助机构和国际组织都没有考虑暴力问题,因此针对贫困的传统项目并没有直接解决暴力问题。反过来,暴力有效地削弱了这些计划,使其无效。与此同时,穷人仍然很脆弱,瘟疫继续折磨着他们。因此,改善穷人的福祉不仅仅是增加获得金钱或商品的机会。豪根和布特罗斯认为他们需要基本的保护。如果穷人遭受性剥削、奴役、勒索和盗窃,他们就不会兴旺发达。遭受身体暴力可能会损害工作能力,同时产生他们无力支付的医疗费。如果孩子们害怕上学或被关在家里,因为他们可能会受到攻击,那么人力资本积累也会受到影响。极度贫困的人在经济方面已经是高危人群。暴力和暴力威胁只会扩大风险,而在意识到这种风险时会加剧后果。豪根和布特罗斯随后就执法对减少贫困的重要性达成共识。然而,发展中国家的刑事司法系统严重不足。这在一定程度上是由于殖民时期的遗留问题,当时执法部门只为精英提供保护(176-7),尽管缺乏
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Locust Effect by Gary A. Haugen and Victor Boutros (review)
It is tragic that The Locust Effect has to be written in the first place. The developed world should not need to be woken up to the violence that plagues the lives of the poor. In truth, no society should be guilty of abandoning the impoverished to the clutches of violence. Unfortunately, according to Gary Haugen and Victor Boutros, this is our reality. The developed world is neglectful, preoccupied with poverty alleviation through aid and economic growth. Meanwhile, the poor continue to suffer from institutional failures that leave them devoid of remedy. Without justice and basic protections, they continue to be victimized and stripped of their humanity. The imagery that confronts us at the outset of the book is intentionally shocking. It sensitizes the reader to the struggles of the poor in the face of devastating violence. However, the authors are not trying to convince us that violence against the poor is wrong. Any sensible person would find their stories repulsive and repugnant. Instead, the book is meant to be a window to the reality of the poor, revealing their hidden personal struggles with violence, and thereby criticize the developed world for what it has not done. This is in the hope of inspiring a change in how we think and talk about development, while feeding a sense of urgency and moral outrage. The authors derive the book’s name from the notion of predatory violence as a plague that has ‘‘the power to destroy everything,’’ much like the locust cloud that devastated the Midwest United States in 1875 (xi). The poor are uniquely vulnerable to this plague because they are desperate and easy to manipulate thanks to their economic circumstances (61). In addition, the poor are typically unprotected because they live under dysfunctional criminal justice systems. This dynamic, the authors explain, confounds conventional approaches to poverty alleviation and leads to a vicious circle. Violence does not figure into the calculus of most aid agencies and international organizations, so conventional programs that target poverty do not address violence directly. In turn, violence effectively undercuts these programs, rendering them ineffective. Meanwhile, the poor remain vulnerable and the plague continues to feed upon them. Accordingly, improving the well-being of the poor is not just a function of increased access to money or goods. Haugen and Boutros argue that they require basic protections. The poor will not flourish if they are subject to sexual exploitation, enslavement, extortion, and theft. Experiencing physical violence may compromise the ability to work while incurring medical fees they are ill-equipped to pay. Human capital accumulation will also suffer if children are too afraid to go to school or kept home because they may be attacked. The acutely impoverished are already high-risk in economic terms. Violence and the threat of violence only amplify the risk while intensifying the consequences when this risk is realized. Haugen and Boutros subsequently converge on the importance of law enforcement to the reduction of poverty. Criminal justice systems in the developing world, however, are woefully deficient. This is due in part to an overhang of the colonial period, when law enforcement afforded protection only to the elite (176–7), though the lack of
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来源期刊
Genocide Studies International
Genocide Studies International POLITICAL SCIENCE-
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