Reference: UNODC 2011 Global Study on Homicide

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The 2011 Global Study on Homicide has been conceived to provide a unique overview of the ultimate crime. The picture it paints is of a phenomenon marked by large disparities in distribution, demographics, typologies and mechanisms.

At one extreme, where homicide rates are high and firearms and organized crime in the form of drug trafficking play a substantial role, 1 in 50 men aged 20 will be murdered before they reach the age of 31. At the other, the probability of such an occurrence is up to 400 times lower.

There are many reasons for this but one of the links most clearly identified in this study is that homicide is much more common in countries with low levels of human development, high levels of income inequality and weak rule of law than in more equitable societies, where socio-economic stability seems to be something of an antidote to homicide.

Disparities not only exist in homicide typologies but also in their prevalence in different regions and countries, yet this study shows that intimate partner/family-related homicide is a chronic problem everywhere. Women murdered by their past or present male partner make up the vast majority of its victims worldwide, which explains why in many countries women are more likely to be murdered in the home than elsewhere.

Men, on the other hand, make up the vast majority of both victims and perpetrators of all types of crime, including homicide, and are more likely to be killed in the street. They are also more likely to be young, the street is more likely to be in a built up area and they are most likely to be killed with a gun.

It is the comprehensive cross-national and time series homicide data from 207 countries and territories, forming the backbone of the Global Study on Homicide, which has enabled the extensive multi-national team behind it to come to such concrete conclusions. Analysis of this nature is fundamental in understanding the forces that drive homicide so that measures and policies can be developed to help bring about its reduction.

Full report (PDF, 7.04 MB)

Press release – english, spanish

Key findings

See the data at:

UNODC Homicide Statistics

Recommended by Berto Jongman.

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Oct 7

Patrick Meier: OpenStreetMap Micro-Tasking Imagery

Patrick Meier

OpenStreetMap’s New Micro-Tasking Platform for Satellite Imagery Tracing

September 7, 2011

The Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team’s (HOT) response to Haiti remains one of the most remarkable examples of what’s possible when volunteers, open source software and open data intersect. When the 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck on January 12th, 2010, the Google Map of downtown Port-au-Prince was simply too incomplete to be used for humanitarian response. Within days, however, several hundred volunteers from the OpenStreetMap (OSM) commu-nity used satellite imagery to trace roads, shelters, and other features to create the most detailed map of Haiti ever created.

Read full posting with graphics.

See other Patrick Meier contributions at Phi Beta Iota.

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Sep 7

Reference: 2011 State of the Future

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Source

Executive Summary Free Online

This is a long-standing, deeply developed, and priceless contribution to the global dialog.  The fifteen global challenges, listed below, are those of the United Nations Millenium Project.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Jul 20

Reference: A Visual Representation of the Human Development Index

Human Development Research Paper: Graphical Statistical Methods for the Representation of the Human Development Index and its Components (César A. Hidalgo) (70 pages)

Source

 

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Feb 28

ClimateGate Rolling Update CLOSED

ClimateGate Rolling Update

ClimateGate Rolling Update

REMINDER:  Environmental Degradation, not Climate Change, is High-Level Threat #3.  Climate Change is less than 10% of that, and within Climate Change, mercury and sulfer are more important than carbon.  Furthermore, it is not possible to address any one threat without addressing the other nine (e.g. #1 Poverty) with harmonized policies from Agriculture to Water, so the bottom line is that these talks are isolated and worthless.  The world needs a serious global strategy with serious analytics, a commitment to understanding true costs of every product and service, and a commitment to bringing the five billion poor into a prosperous world at peace.  Anything less is a betrayal of the public trust.

19 Dec Top 10 Bad Developments For Global Warming Alarmists (HumanEvents)

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Dec 19

Reference: World Brain 101, 102, 103

Three links have been placed into Antecedents.

World Brain 101 is a brief review of the history of the concept across many eras.

World Brain 102 is the concept that was presented to the Secretary General of the United Nations (UN), but lacks a single Member nation willing to present it to the General Assembly as a righteous idea.

World Brain 103 provides, for each of the ten high-level threats to humanity, each of the twelve core policies, and each of the eight demographic challenges, easy links to the following:

  • SILOBREAKER 360 Current Day View
  • Wikipedia Page
  • Amazon List of Books
  • Top Cited Experts with Contact Information (2006)
  • Top Web Sites Listed and Linked (2006)

None of this stuff would have been possible (as humble as it is) without all of the people that collaborated across twenty years to advance the emerging new craft of public intelligence, now known in the aggregate as M4IS2 (Multinational, Multiagency, Multidisciplinary, Multidomain Information-Sharing and Sense-Making).

Golden Candle, OSINT, Platinum Awards

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Sep 13

Reference: Strategic Survey 2010 includes Afghanistan

Berto Jongman Recommends...

Overview & Ordering Online

This year’s survey places strong emphasis on the global nature of economic and financial vulernability, and on Afghanistan.  Below is a quote in two sections  from the official press statement releasing the survey to the public.

Strategic Survey 2010 does not seek to lay out a new comprehensive strategy for Afghanistan. It does however argue that for Western states to be pinned down militarily and psychologically in Afghanistan will not be in the service of their wider political and security interests. The challenge of Afghanistan must be viewed and addressed in proportion to the other threats to international security and the other requirements for foreign-policy investment. With economic, financial and diplomatic activity moving at such a pace and with such varied outcomes internationally, military operations in general have to be all the more carefully considered. Precision and adaptability will be essential watchwords. For heavy, large, military deployment, the longue durée will be seen as an attitude for other times, other centuries.

The Afghan campaign has involved not just mission creep but mission multiplication; narrowing the political-military engagement to core goals as described will allow for proper attention to be paid to other areas posing international terrorist risks, and indeed to other matters affecting international security.

See Also:

Search: Strategic Analytic Model

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Sep 7

Reference: Dr. Dr. Dave Warner & Synergy Strike Force in Afghanistan–”Save the Willing First”

Tags:

Strike Force Handbook

Dr. Dr. Dave Warner (PhD, MD)

Ref A:  Cyber-Pass Meets Khyber Pass

Ref B:   Warner to Clapper on PRT Comms

Ref C:  UnityNet White Paper Final

Strike Force Home Page

See Also:

Earth Intelligence Network “One Call At a Time”

Lee Felsenstein Concept for Cellular Aid

AidData

INTELLIGENCE for EARTH

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Jul 10

Reference: Global Peace Index 2010

Global Peace Index Web Site

Tip of the hat to Berto Jongman in The Netherlands for this lead.

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Jun 16

Reference: Index of Global Reports 2009-2010

Berto Jongman Recommends...

The below report provides a summary of major reports that are being integrated into the Millenium Project under the State of the Future project inspired by Jerome Glenn.  Their Futures Matrix and the Indicators they have devised for each global domain are instructive.

Summary of Global Reports 2009-2010

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Jun 16