Eldis

Please note - this is a temporary window. id21 is joining forces with Eldis and therefore the id21 website has been suspended. Soon all id21 content will be available on the Eldis website.

The views of young Guatemalans on how to end gang violence

A brutal civil war may have formally ended in 1996, but insecurity and violence characterise daily life in ‘post-conflict’ Guatemala. Repressive attempts to control the violence caused by youth gangs have failed. It is time the views of young people were heard in debates on gang violence.

Known in Guatemala as maras, youth gangs are a very visible form of ‘post-conflict’ violence. The violence of the gangs varies a lot but could include pick-pocketing, robbery, kidnapping, rape, vandalism and to some extent arms and drug trafficking. Also, when maras clash over territory, non-gang members are often caught in the crossfire. Maras exercise extreme control of their members. Those who attempt to leave may be killed, along with innocent family members. In this environment, firearms are the most common cause of death for 15-24 year old Guatemalans.

A report from Queen Mary, University of London, UK looks at how young Guatemalans perceive youth gangs. Interviews showed that most members do not join a mara out of desire to engage in violence. They value the friendship, protection, unity and solidarity that membership brings in communities where families have broken down and state institutions have failed. High unemployment and lack of education makes joining a mara a rational career move.

National youth policy in Guatemala not only tends to regard young people as passive beneficiaries of services but also views them as potential criminals and targets of repression. Policymakers have not taken into account the ability of young people to act positively, nor have they recognised their rights. Until this is addressed, Guatemalan youth are likely to continue to be drawn to gangs.

Asked for their views on solutions to gang culture, young people indicated:

Pentecostalism has taken deep root in the urban areas of a country that was once almost exclusively Catholic. Churches provide a self-supporting social structure with strict shared expectations – indeed, in this sense, they are comparable to maras.

The author stresses the need to:

Source(s):
“Young people’s view on how to tackle gang-violence in ‘post-conflict’ Guatemala”, Environment & Urbanization, 16 (2) pages 83-99, by Ailsa Winton, October 2004

Funded by: Economic and Social Research Council

id21 Research Highlight: 21 December 2005

Further Information:
Ailsa Winton
Institute of Geography
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Circuito Exterior, Ciudad Universitaria
04510, México, D.F.
México

Tel: +52 55 56224330 ext. 44818
Contact the contributor: a.winton@igg.unam.mx

Queen Mary, University of London

Other related links:
'Guns damage hopes for peace in Haiti'

'Violence in Colombia and Guatemala: the voices of the urban poor'

'Agriculture heals the wounds of conflict'

Views expressed on these pages are not necessarily those of DfID, IDS, id21 or other contributing institutions. Articles featured on the id21 site may be copied or quoted without restriction provided id21 and originating author(s) and institution(s) are acknowledged. Copyright © 2009 IDS. All rights reserved.

id21 is funded by the UK Department for International Development. id21 is one of a family of knowledge services at the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex. id21 is a www.oneworld.net partner and an affiliate of www.mediachannel.org. IDS is a charitable company, No. 877338.