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Aiding Violence: The Development
Enterprise in Rwanda
by Peter Uvin
Kumarian Press, West
Hartford, CT. 1998. 288 pp. (Paperback) ISBN: 1565490835,
(Cloth) ISBN: 1565490843.
This book may be ordered online through Hunger Notes'
bookstore.
Peter Uvin shifts focus from the role played
by the international community in responding to the Rwandan genocide of 1994 with
humanitarian aid, to consideration of the role played, or not played, by the development
aid community operative in Rwanda leading into the 1990s. Uvin details how international
organizations, in addition to failing to catch warning signs of impending genocide and
respond appropriately, also failed to weigh carefully the effects and potential to harm
inherent in the development programs. The development community failed to acknowledge
institutionalized racism and indirectly intensified inequalities and the social exclusion
of peasants. The development community failed while believing its efforts were successful,
pointing to traditional development indicators that made the countrys outlook seem
so promising.
Given increasing efforts to monitor and measure
the potential for genocide throughout the world, Uvins book is an important tool in
stimulating discussion and debate about the role of the international community in
preventing genocide and structural violence in all stages of development, well in advance
of deterioration into violence. Aiding Violence points us to the need to rethink
the development process, increase its accountability, and cleanse it of the elements that
unwittingly exacerbate social problems instead of support for positive social change.
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