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Alliance for Security Justice and Development

Alliance for Security, Justice and Development

 

A regional platform for dialogue, cooperation, knowledge exchange and resource mobilization to prevent and respond to organized crime in Latin America and the Caribbean

South America map and people smiling - Alliance for Security- Inter American Development Bank - IDB
Alliance logo - Alliance for Security - Inter American Development Bank - IDB
A holistic initiative targeted at fostering dialogue, cooperation and collective action to strengthen institutions, prevent community harm, and curb the rapid expansion, growth and influence of organized crime in Latin America and the Caribbean
Protecting the Most Vulnerable Populations and Communities

Mitigating risk factors related to criminal violence perpetrated by organized groups, including youth recruitment, and reducing the effects of this violence on the most vulnerable populations and communities

City landscape - Alliance for Security- Inter American Development Bank - IDB
Strengthening Security and Justice Institutions

Enhancing institutional resilience across the security and justice system, as well as in other strategic sectors, against organized crime to improve performance, efficiency and effectiveness in responding to organized crime

Institution Facade - Alliance for Security- Inter American Development Bank - IDB
Disrupting Financial Flows and Curbing Illicit Markets

Weakening the power and influence of organized crime groups through actions and initiatives targeted at reducing the size of the illicit market and restraining their operational capacity and ability to use the economic profits derived from illegal markets

A graph with numbers on a computer screen. Financial markets - Inter-American Development Bank - IDB

Facilitate the Generation of Knowledge and Shared Diagnostics

The Alliance will foster collaboration and facilitate generation and sharing of knowledge on the scale, dynamics, causes and developmental impacts of criminal violence in the region, emphasizing the role of organized crime.

Data illustration - Alliance for Security- Inter American Development Bank - IDB

Foster Innovation and Bring Evidence-Based Solutions to Scale

The Alliance will support the development, testing and evaluation of innovative solutions, as well as the scaling-up of successful, evidence-based interventions tailored to prevent and address organized crime, while considering the specific context of each community, country or subregion.

Bulb illustration - Alliance for Security- Inter American Development Bank - IDB

Strengthen Institutional Capacity and Foster Collective Learning

The Alliance will support high-quality and specialized training programs and workshops and will provide technical assistance to strengthen the skills and knowledge needed to ensure the effectiveness and sustainability of the policies targeted at preventing and responding to organized crime.

Woman holding a tablet in their hands - Alliance for Security- Inter American Development Bank - IDB

Promote Collaboration and Amplify Regional Expertise

The Alliance will facilitate regular technical and policy-based forums, expert consultations and working groups to promote dialogue, knowledge exchange, collaboration and cooperation among diverse stakeholders within the region and beyond by fostering partnerships among governments, multilateral organizations, civil society and others.

Holding hands - Alliance for Security- Inter American Development Bank - IDB
hands
Declaration of Barbados
Download the Declaration
Alliance Map - Alliance - Inter American Development Bank - IDB
Regional Footprint

Established in December 2024 with the support of the IDB, the Alliance is composed of and led by 18 borrowing member countries of the Bank.

Eighteen Latin American and Caribbean Countries Launch Regional Alliance to Address Organized Crime with IDB Support
•    The Alliance will work on three pillars: protecting vulnerable populations, strengthening security and justice institutions, and reducing illicit markets and financial flows.•    This unprecedented initiative includes governments, multilateral organizations, civil society, and other interested...
High Crime Costs Burden Latin America and the Caribbean
-    Direct costs of crime in 2022 reached 3.44% of the region’s GDP, mostly unchanged from previous study. -    The cost of crime is equivalent to 78% of the public budget for education, double the public budget for social assistance, and 12 times the budget for research and development. -   ...
IDB Approves First-of-its-Kind Loan to Support Ecuador with Preventive Measures to Address Organized Crime
•    This is the first time in the IDB’s history that a program specifically addresses the challenges of organized crime with several preventive and institutional measures. The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) approved a $150 million loan and a $5 million grant to support Ecuador in preventing...
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Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is the Alliance?

 

The Alliance for Security, Justice, and Development is the result of governments and institutions in Latin America and the Caribbean coming together in Bridgetown, Barbados, in December, 2024 to establish this shared regional initiative. The founding declaration of the Alliance establishes its objective: to promote evidence-based regional, subregional, and national actions and public policies to strengthen institutions, prevent community harms including youth recruitment, and mobilize resources to address and provide coordinated responses to the rapid expansion, growth and influence of organized crime in our nations.

The Alliance unites governments, multilateral organizations, and civil society around the efforts necessary to achieve this shared objective.

2. What motivated the creation of the Alliance?

 

Citizen Security is a critical determinant of the well-being and the socioeconomic development of Latin American and Caribbean (LAC) nations. In specific, organized crime groups impose high social, institutional, and economic costs across LAC countries. The shared threat that organized crime represents for all LAC countries, and its transnational nature, demands a commensurate regional response. The Alliance was created to foster and facilitate the development of strategic regional products to address the threat of organized crime and mitigate its social, institutional, and economic costs in a more effective manner.

3. Who is eligible to join the Alliance?

 

The Alliance is formed by a network of countries and partner institutions who have come together, under the framework of the Alliance, to join efforts and produce regional public goods to increase institutional resilience against organized crime groups and the violence associated with them in Latin America and the Caribbean. We encourage other institutions to join us at the IDB in the effort to provide technical and financial support to advance the Alliance's lines of action and products. Contact us if your organization is interested in becoming part of this joint effort! 

4. What type of support does the Alliance provide to its members?

 

The Alliance mobilizes human, technical, technological, and financial resources to provide a regional institutional response to the threat posed by organized crime, as well as to mitigate its causes and consequences. This response involves generating three types of regional products:

  • Knowledge Products, Tools, and Methodologies: Practical and rigorous knowledge about the most challenging problems and the most promising solutions and interventions, and generation of knowledge-based resources (guides, tools, and methodologies) to facilitate evidence-informed policy decision-making. 
  • Inter-institutional Exchange and Coordination Mechanisms: Effective coordination mechanisms, both at national and transnational levels, that overcome the fragmentation that organized crime groups exploit to advance their interests.
  • Policy innovations and Pilot Interventions: Scalable policy innovations that can match the ingenuity and adaptability of organized crime groups with high impact and flexible solutions.
5. What is the Alliance’s governance structure?

 

The Alliance is organized and operates based on the following governance structure:

  • Members: The Alliance is made up of LAC Ministers of Security and Ministers of Justice, who may appoint a technical focal point.
  • Technical Secretariat: The IDB provides technical, strategic, and coordination support to the Alliance related to the planning and implementation of the work and technical meetings with the countries within the framework of its objectives, acting as liaison.
  • Pro-Tempore Presidency: A member country of the Alliance may assume the pro-tempore presidency for 12 months.
  • Technical Working Groups: Composed of the members, these working groups are established for each of the three objectives of the Alliance. The groups may address the issues prioritized by the Ministries, define and implement a work plan, and provide progress reports. The groups will be led by one or two countries.
  • Steering Committee: A steering committee established as the body for strategic guidance of the Alliance, with the support of the technical secretariat. The committee may be composed of representatives of the country that assumes the Pro Tempore Presidency and the leading countries of each of the Technical Working Groups.
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