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by Rachel Hsu

On October 24, Colombia surpassed 1 million coronavirus cases, making it the eighth country to reach this tragic milestone.[1] One month later, on November 24, the peace agreement which ended the 52-year conflict between the Marxist FARC guerilla group and the Colombian government celebrated its fourth anniversary. While Covid-19 has devastated nations around the world in unparalleled ways, Colombia’s situation is unique: the pandemic hit the country at a crucial inflection point in its history, a moment in which the success of the peace deal was being determined. While peace was already under considerable strain, Covid-19 has presented new and greater challenges to the process. In particular, the threat the pandemic poses to the social and economic reintegration of ex-combatants—the foundation of the peace deal—may prove the final nail in the agreement’s coffin, flinging the country back into conflict at a time in which peace is so desperately needed. Ex-combatants find themselves on the losing side of an increasingly asymmetrical bargain, and facing uncertainty about their economic futures and fundamental safety, the million-dollar question is this: at what point will the challenges to the peace deal outweigh their commitment to reintegration? The answer, although far from clear, will determine the near future of Colombia. Consequently, reintegration is the most important issue facing the country.  

A Brief History of the Colombian Conflict  

Since the inception of the Republic in 1886,[2] Colombia has been embroiled in internal conflict for more than 60 years, experiencing only eleven years of peace since the 1950s. The first group of civil wars—four total between 1885-1957—were fought between the Liberal and Conservative parties. Most notable among these were the Thousand Day War (1899-1902), which claimed over 100,000 lives, and La Violencia (1948-1957), which killed more than 200,000.[3] As in every country, the factors of history affect politics today—and the structural causes and effects of La Violencia prove vital to understanding the more recent conflict. First among these is the weakness of the early Colombian state, which failed to construct a law enforcement presence in much of the country. Harvey Kline frames this as a deliberate tradeoff: tax-averse governing elites feared military or police takeover of government, as had occurred elsewhere in Latin America, and instead substituted private forces for public ones.4 This in part reflected the concentrated power of the private landowners who made and enforced laws on their property in place of the state, a pattern whose roots lie in the colonial era. Spanish colonizers decided that the agricultural and mineral resources of South America were most efficiently exploited through large plantations or mines, creating an extremely unequal distribution of land and power—inequality which persisted through institutions long after independence.[4] Throughout the formation of the Republic, the interests of regional economic elites trumped political centralization, which was further complicated by Colombia’s geographic barriers. The dual results of this tradeoff—state weakness and land inequality—fed the later conflict in

Colombia. Former President Alfonso Lopez went so far as to state that “unlike other Latin American countries, violence did not originate from the government but from the lack of government.”[5] Colombia, a state which “geographically defies unification,”[6] became a nation of regions in which the control of the central government seldom extended far outside Bogota and never even approached Weber’s classification of sovereignty as a monopoly over the use of force within a territory. Another pattern made clear by La Violencia was the norm of war as a continuation of politics by other means. Much of this was at the behest of the landowning elites, who enlisted poor campesinos[7] to fight their political battles—meaning the majority of the population participated in politics through armed conflict before they even gained suffrage.9 La Violencia ended in a political settlement known as the National Front, in which the Liberal and Conservative parties agreed to share power at regular intervals. 

The conditions in Colombia after 1957 created a perfect storm which led to the 19642016 conflict: extreme land inequality left the campesino population deeply aggrieved, and a political system limited to two parties provided no route for peaceful political expression of these grievances, so Marxist guerilla groups formed to address these grievances through other means, espousing pre-existing norms of political violence. The first group to emerge was the Ejército de Liberación National (ELN) in 1964, followed by the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de

Colombia (FARC) in 1966, the Ejército Popular de Liberación (EPL) in 1967, and the 19th of April Movement (M-19) in 1970.[8] Because the historically weak state lacked the capacity to fight the guerillas, it once again encouraged the creation of private forces, this time to defend against the communist rebels—leading to the formation of paramilitary groups which would go on to exacerbate the conflict. These paramilitary groups were given legal status under Decree 3398 in 1965 and Law 48 in 1968 and initially cooperated closely with the army, though the government stopped supporting them in the 1980s when it became clear paramilitaries were killing civilians and taking money from drug traffickers.[9] Paramilitaries eventually coalesced into the Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia (AUC) in 1997.[10] A final actor in the conflict was the drug cartels, who funded both sides with profits obtained mainly from cocaine trafficking to the US. Coca became a popular crop for many poor farmers because profitable amounts could be grown on very small plots of land and transported in backpacks, making up for the conditions of land inequality and state absence in rural areas (which equated to a lack of roads and markets). To say that the Colombian conflict was devastating would be an understatement: it raged for 52 years, cost the country an estimated $151 billion, claimed the lives of over 260,000 people, and displaced more than 7 million others.[11] By the time it ended with the 2016 peace deal, the conflict was the longest in Latin American history, leaving Colombia with the second most internally displaced persons in the world after Syria. 

Between 1964-2016, numerous attempts at peace failed to end the conflict between the government and FARC, the largest of the guerilla groups. One of these in particular, pursued by

president Belisario Betancur in 1984, is notable due to the cause of its failure.[12] The Agreement of La Uribe in 1984 allowed FARC to found a political party called the Unión Patriótica (UP). In the following years, an estimated 3,000 members[13] of the UP were killed—contributing to the failure agreement and fueling FARC’s justification of its continued insurgency. Another important peace agreement was reached in 2003 between the government under President Álvaro Uribe Vélez and the AUC. By 2006, 30,671 members of the AUC had collectively demobilized.[14] However, many dissident paramilitaries refused to enter (or later abandoned) the peace process, leading to the formation of “neo-paramilitaries” which the government calls bandas criminales, or BACRIM.17 The flawed disbandment of the AUC is not the only notable achievement of the Uribe administration. During Uribe’s 2002-2010 presidency, the number of soldiers and police increased from 291,316 to 431,900, and an armed push against FARC reduced their ranks from 24,000 to 8,000.[15] By the time President Juan Manuel Santos began the negotiations that would ultimately lead to the 2016 peace deal, the military balance of power had shifted, leaving both the Colombian army and FARC pessimistic of their chances of victory. The Santos peace negotiations proceeded between 2012-2016, and an agreement was announced on August 24, 2016.[16] Following modifications, the Colombian congress approved the peace deal in November, and the armed conflict with FARC came to a formal end.20     

Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration 

Central to the 2016 peace agreement is the process of disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration, often abbreviated to DDR. DDR has reached near-orthodoxy status since the 1990s, adopted by the UN as the central dogma of peacebuilding—there have been a whopping total of 60 DDR initiatives in the world since 1989, including the one in Colombia.[17] So what exactly is DDR? The first step is disarmament, wherein combatants lay down their arms. [18] Crucially, the action of disarmament establishes a social contract between the government and the individual peace signatories, wherein “combatants surrender the security and economic surety their weapons provide, in exchange for opportunities and assistance in finding new livelihoods.”[19] Next comes demobilization, which involves the dissolution of armed groups. These first two steps are programmatic, military-focused procedures that occur shortly after the end of conflict. The final stage, and the focus of this paper, is much broader: reintegration, which the Cartagena Contribution to DDR defines as “the process by which ex-combatants acquire civilian status and gain sustainable employment and income,” clarifying that “reintegration is essentially a social and economic process with an open time-frame, primarily taking place in communities at the local level.”[20] 

As simple as it is to reduce DDR to three letters representing three clearly defined processes, the reality is much more complex—in fact, DDR has evolved significantly over its relatively short history. Becoming intimately connected to wider peacebuilding programs, the goal of DDR has shifted from the narrow dissolution of armed groups to a broader conception which seeks to lay the groundwork for sustainable peace. It has become a dynamic political enterprise, “a complex bargaining process connected fundamentally to local conditions on the ground.”[21] The UN establishes that whether DDR succeeds depends on “the political will of the parties to commit themselves to peace.”[22] Knight (2008) clarifies that the success of the DDR process is rather determined by the continued maintenance of that political will.[23]

Disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration has “repeatedly proved to be vital”[24] to the creation of sustainable peace. But not all parts of DDR weigh equally: rather, the expansion of DDR’s scope has taken place primarily in the reintegration stage, which by definition encompasses broader social and economic goals. The United Nations Integrated DDR Standards maintain that “the sustainable social and economic reintegration of former combatants should be the ultimate objective of [DDR]. If reintegration fails, the achievements of the disarmament and demobilization phase are undermined, instability increases, and sustainable reconstruction and development are put at risk.”[25] Therefore, given that the achievement of long term peace is contingent on the success of DDR, and the success of DDR is contingent on the success of reintegration, it logically follows that reintegration is the process upon which the entire fate of peace hinges. 

The Colombian Peace Deal and DDR 

The Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict and Build a Stable and Lasting Peace was ratified on November 29, 2016. The agreement consists of six parts: comprehensive rural reform; political participation; end of the conflict; solution to the problem of illicit drugs; victims; and implementation and verification. The breadth of its content recognizes the structural causes of conflict and attempts to redress them, extending the peace deal far beyond a simple end to fighting. This paper focuses on the challenges facing guarantees included in Chapter 3 of the peace deal, which includes DDR. Acknowledging the importance of reintegration, the agreement states that “laying the bases for building a stable and long-lasting peace requires effective reincorporation30 of the FARC into the social, economic, and political life of the country”[26]

The “economic and social reincorporation” process initiated by the 2016 peace deal is remarkably ambitious. Following the ratification of the peace accord, ex-combatants relocated to designated spaces for reintegration. These have evolved through different acronyms over the course of the peace process, but are today known as Former Territorial Spaces for Reintegration and Normalization (AECTRs). Here, ex-combatants underwent a six month demobilization and disarmament process, turning over their arms to the UN Verification Mission in Colombia. A total of 13,202 ex-FARC were accredited as demobilized.[27] Next came reintegration, throughout which ex-combatants receive a monthly allowance of 90% of the legal minimum monthly wage. Total disbursements of economic benefits between August 2018-June 2020 amounted to $316,278 million.[28] Now that early stages of reintegration have finished, former FARC members have full citizenship and are free to the AECTRs.34 However, some have elected to stay: as of October 2020, 2,619 people remained in the AECTRs, while 9,582 had left.[29] 

The long term reintegration process is laid out in the “reincorporation route,” which contains seven broad components: educational, economic sustainability, habitability and housing, healthcare, psychosocial wellbeing, family, and community. Programs included in the educational and economic sustainability components are especially important. As of March 2020, 5,224 ex-combatants were enrolled in primary to high school-level education programs and an additional 1,768 had participated in vocational training.[30] Ex-combatants are eligible for a one-off grant of COP 8,000,000 to fund individual productive projects, of which there have been 1,718 so far. 4,987 former combatants have benefitted from productive projects.[31]  

Notably, section 3.4 of the peace agreement also contains security guarantees including “the fight against criminal organisations responsible for homicides and massacres or who attack human rights advocates, social movements or political movements” or who challenge the implementation of peace.[32] This guarantee reflects a “modern, qualitatively new concept of security” which emphasizes the “defence of democratic values, in particular the protection of the rights and freedoms of those engaged in politics.”39 Recognizing the “extraordinary risk” FARC peace signatories faced, the Final Agreement also includes lengthy guarantees for the security of reincorporating ex-combatants in and promises the dismantling of the “paramilitary phenomenon” in a “National Political Pact” to ensure arms ceased to be used in politics. One of the guiding principles of Chapter 3 is “to safeguard the legitimate monopoly of force and of the use of arms by the state across the country’s territories”[33]—a statement that broke from Colombian government’s past tendency to delegate policing to private forces. What in other countries might be a recognition of simple Weberian sovereignty was in Colombia a declaration of bold, historically unprecedented intent.

The exceptionally broad scope of the peace deal is also worth discussing. The 300-page Final Agreement reads less like a cessation of conflict and more like a broad mandate for structural economic reform and development, achieving social equity, strengthening democracy, and expanding state presence. This largely reflects the agreement’s explicit recognition of “the historical causes of the conflict, such as the unresolved issue of land ownership and, in particular, the concentration thereof, the exclusion of the rural population, and the underdevelopment of rural communities.”[34] Upon FARC’s insistence, the peace agreement acknowledged the role of state weakness, land inequality, and norms of political violence—and it promised to resolve all three. It also employs novel territory-based, gender-based, and ethnic-based approaches. Chapter 1, Comprehensive Rural Reform, aims to reverse the conditions that facilitated violence by establishing a structural and in-depth transformation of rural Colombia. The central mechanisms of this reform are the Development Programs with a Territorial Approach (PDETs).[35] The goal: eradication of hunger and poverty, closing the gap between urban and rural areas, the democratization of property and greater land equality, and guaranteed non-recurrence of violence which stemmed from any of the previous grievances. Chapter 5 outlines a solution to the problem of illicit drugs, which fueled the conflict.[36] Recognizing causal factors of poverty and marginalization, the government created the Program for the Substitution of Illegal Crops (PNIS).[37] And finally, the peace agreement hints at the central condition which begat violence: state weakness. “Appreciating and extolling the fact that the central pillar of peace is the promotion of the presence and the effective operation of the state throughout the country, especially throughout the many regions that are today afflicted by neglect, by the lack of an effective civil service and by the effects of the internal armed conflict itself,” the agreement states, “it is an essential goal of national reconciliation to construct a new territorial-based welfare and development paradigm to the benefit of broad sectors of the population that have hitherto been the victims of exclusion and despair.”[38]

Yet while the agreement’s success at its ultimate goal of dismantling the structural conditions of violence in Colombia will broadly determine the sustainability of peace, it is reintegration which will decide if and when armed conflict between former FARC members and the government recurs. Each of the other aspects of the peace deal—comprehensive rural reform, solution to the problem of illicit drugs, political participation—would only cause a relapse into conflict if ex-combatants believed that these efforts had failed so significantly that they decided to remobilize. For example, a failure of rural reform would only cause the peace deal to collapse if it led to a failure of reintegration. Importantly, lapses in other areas of the peace agreement could contribute to reintegration failure by adding to a sense of government let-down, increasing the inertia of grievances which might eventually out-weigh ex-combatants’ commitment to reincorporation processes. But if reintegration itself fails, this self-evidently means conflict has returned in some form. Thus the social and economic reintegration of ex-combatants is both the foundation of peace and the precise mechanism of its potential failure. 

Challenges to Reintegration 

Recall that the success of DDR is contingent on the maintenance of political will from both sides. Disarmament creates a social contract wherein combatants agree to give up their weapons in returns for guarantees of security and economic opportunity, which those weapons had once

offered. If either side goes back on its end of the deal—if combatants decide their safety and economic livelihoods are better served by taking up arms again, or if the government ceases to offer security or economic support—then DDR fails. Critically, while the social contract is established by disarmament, its guarantees are carried out during the reintegration phase. Challenges to reintegration should be viewed through this framework: are ex-combatants better off participating in peace than going to war? Do the benefits of reintegration exceed the value of a weapon? Will the government hold up its end of the deal? And at what point will the costs of peace outweigh ex-combatant commitment to reintegration? Right now, most ex-combatants— 12,940 as of March 2020—remain committed to reintegration.[39] However, they are increasingly questioning the security guarantees and economic options provided.

            The Covid-19 pandemic has not created many entirely novel challenges—rather, it has exacerbated pre-existing issues. The pandemic has had four main effects on Colombia. First, it has lessened state presence in rural areas as the government has withdrawn to focus on battling the virus. Second, the pandemic has ravaged the Colombian economy, leading to skyrocketing unemployment and greater inequality, particularly in the countryside. Third, it has shifted the locus of government attention towards lockdown measures and economic fallout and away from the peace deal. Finally, the pandemic has closed down schools across a country which lacks sufficient Internet infrastructure. These four effects have all worsened existing obstacles to the Final Agreement, raising the costs of peace for ex-combatants and contributing to a sense that the government is not fulfilling its side of the contract. 

Government Will and Capacity 

The government’s political will has weakened under the administration of president Ivan Duque, a political protege of Alvaro Uribe and member of his Democratic Center Party. Duque’s 2018 presidential election campaign promised to “modify” the peace agreement, feeding on public sentiments that the deal was too lenient on the guerillas. Once in office, his administration slashed funding for transitional justice measures and broke from the crop substitution approach in the Final Agreement. A Gallup poll noted 57% of Colombians believed the administration would not fulfill the promises of the Final Agreement.[40] Duque’s policies and rhetoric have increased uncertainty among ex-combatants about the strength of the government’s commitment to the peace process. As one article put it, “The transition from a government that had signed the peace agreement and started implementation, to one that openly questioned the peace process, generated discord among the ranks of the former combatants.”[41]  

Implementation of the peace deal has been slow. The University of Notre Dame’s Kroc Institute found that only 35% of the 578 commitments in the peace agreement have reached “advanced levels” of implementation, while 34% are in a state of “minimal” implementation and 31% have yet to be started at all.[42] DDR processes faced early challenges and delays. By March 2017, none of the reintegration zones had been fully built—leaving demobilized combatants, some with children, living under plastic sheets. Other areas of the peace deal have suffered slow implementation as well. Though nearly 100,000 families signed up for the crop substitution program, 41,910 have yet to receive any payment.[43] One report found that at the current rate of implementation, it will take forty years to finish establishing PDETs—the primary mechanism of rural development and establishment of state presence in the countryside. Thus, both government will and capacity have proven tenuous at best throughout the last few years of the peace process.    

The most important effect of the transition in political rhetoric under the Duque administration and the slow pace of implementation has been to undermine ex-combatants’ confidence that the government will hold up its end of the deal. Now, with the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, the government’s priorities have shifted even further. The peace deal is a massive undertaking, and its programs are expensive. During a time of intense economic strain, when politics feels more like fighting a fire than building the future, implementation of the peace agreement is no longer the first item on the agenda. The Duque administration recently released a five year-long plan for Covid recovery that would cost upwards of $46.8 billion—13% of the country’s GDP.[44] If the government was unable to even begin one third of the peace deal’s provisions in four normal years, with less political will and more pressing matters to attend to, implementation will undoubtedly slow even further. Given that the success of DDR depends on the maintenance of political will on both sides, the government’s decided lack of will—and inability to hold up its side of the agreement—present a major challenge to reintegration. 

Security 

To every action there is an equal and opposite reaction: every peace deal mobilizes forces to oppose it. Stedman (1997) describes these so-called ‘spoilers’ as “leaders and parties who believe that peace emerging from negotiations threatens their power, worldview, and interests, and use violence to undermine attempts to achieve it.”[45] Peace negotiations involve compromise since they occur by definition because neither side was able to achieve their war aims. Actors who were excluded, stand to lose from peace, or feel their values have been betrayed by the settlement might mobilize against the peace process, undermining stability and threatening the security of peace signatories. Demobilized ex-combatants thus face a security dilemma. Their lives are threatened by spoiler groups, creating incentives for re-armament. Yet this would violate the terms of any DDR-based peace agreement, so ex-combatants must rely on the state— their former nemesis—for protection. State-ensured security therefore forms a crucial piece of the central pact of DDR. 

In Colombia, a handful of different groups act as violent spoilers—one 2018 report counted 7,265 persisting members of illegal armed groups.[46] The peace agreement created a power vacuum in many territories formerly held by FARC under the assumption that government forces would step in. Instead, armed groups often took control, battling each other in bloody turf wars that contributed to continuing violence and terror in the countryside. Following the further withdrawal of government presence during the pandemic, these armed groups have only grown in power. There are three main categories of violent spoilers challenging the reintegration process in Colombia: paramilitary groups, remaining guerilla groups, and FARC dissident groups. 

When the Final Agreement was signed in November 2016, an estimated 800 FARC fighters rejected the peace process wholesale and refused to demobilize. These constituted the first of the FARC “dissidents,” members of the guerilla group that either eschewed peace from the start or abandoned it later. Hundreds more would follow, though exact numbers are hard to pin down. A report published in El Tiempo in December 2019 counted 1,749 total FARC dissidents spread across 19 departments,[47] while other sources place this number closer to 3,000.[48] Today, an estimated 23 different dissident groups operate throughout Colombia.[49]

Another cluster of spoiler groups are the so-called bandes criminales, or BACRIM, that emerged out of the flawed demobilization and reintegration processes of the peace agreement with the AUC in 2006. The largest of these groups is the Gaitanist Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (ACG), also known as the Urabeños or the Clan de Golfo. Emerging after AUC commander Vicente Castaño abandoned the demobilization process in 2006, the ACG has somewhere between 1,500-2,000 members.[50] Los Puntilleros are another sizable paramilitary group which formed out of the rubble of the AUC, though membership is below 1,000.[51]

Third are the remaining other guerilla forces: the ELN, the last original member of the Colombian conflict still standing, and Los Pelusos, a dissident faction of the EPL that rejected the EPL’s 1991 peace agreement with the government. Though the ELN shares its Marxist roots with FARC, the two groups fought each other throughout the conflict. Today, the ELN is one of the largest illegal armed groups still operating in Colombia, with membership likely between 2,000-2,500.[52] FARC’s demobilization presented an opportunity for the ELN to expand into former-FARC territory, allowing the group to take over trafficking roots in new areas. The group has also expanded across the Venezuelan border. The ELN is in conflict with both the ACG and Los Pelusos, and has variant relationships with different FARC dissident factions. 

The above groups reveal a pattern in Colombian history. After decades of violence, the government and an armed group strike a peace bargain that ends with formal demobilization and reintegration of ex-combatants. But this DDR process partly fails, and a significant portion of former fighters either refuse to participate in the peace process in the first place or abandon it later, reforming into smaller and more diffuse criminal groups. This happened after the AUC demobilized in 2006 when dissident factions formed the ACG and other BACRIM, and after the

EPL demobilized in 1991 and dissidents formed Los Pelusos.[53] In 2014, an estimated 24% of Colombia’s demobilized ex-combatants had reverted to criminal activity.[54] These groups contribute to continued violence and insecurity, becoming spoilers to future peace agreements. The same pattern is repeating with FARC, wherein dissident groups are abandoning the peace process, in turn lessening the security of remaining demobilized ex-combatants, prompting them to re-arm in a vicious cycle which degrades peace.  

            The greatest challenge to reintegration comes from these violent spoiler groups and the resulting lack of security ex-combatants suffer. Since the signing of the peace deal, a total of 247 ex-FARC combatants—nearly one in every fifty—have been killed.[55] 44 family members of ex-combatants have been murdered too.[56] Even AECTRs themselves have proven unsafe. In the area around the “Román Ruiz'' reincorporation space in Antioquia, twelve peace signatories have been killed, likely at the hands of the ACG and the 18th Front FARC dissident group. Near another, nine ex-FARC have died. One peace signatory, Alexánder Parra, was murdered inside an AECTR in Meta.[57] The main culprits: the ACG, FARC dissident groups, and the ELN. And ex-combatants are not the only actors in the peace deal being targeted—the NGO Indepaz estimates that more than 1,000 human rights activists and community leaders have been killed since late 2016.[58] Of these, more than 50% were involved in the peace process in some way.   The pandemic has decreased security in rural reincorporation zones further. While the state focused on responses to the virus, armed groups “sought to profit from the sudden change in conditions, the refocusing of state priorities and distracted security forces,” consolidating control over their territories and in some cases acting as the sole governing authority.[59] The UN reported in June that “In various regions, illegal armed groups and criminal organizations have taken advantage of the pandemic to strengthen their presence in the territories, including through attacks against public security forces, forced displacement and confinement of communities, and threats and targeted killings of social leaders and former FARC-EP members.”[60] In an extraordinary demonstration of the government’s lack of complete territorial control, a number of illegal armed groups have taken it upon themselves to impose Covid-related social restrictions. In northern Colombia, the ACG sent WhatsApp messages and circulated pamphlets to residents advising them to stay inside—and threatening to kill them if they disobeyed the lockdown—a strategy mirrored by one dissident FARC group. In areas along the coast, the ELN imposed a number of restrictions, including curfews, road closures, and a ban on large events.[61] Human Rights Watch identified similar efforts in 11 departments. Consequently, violence against ex-combatants and social leaders is on the rise. One study found that “in recent months, there has been an alarming increase in the killings of social leaders and members of vulnerable groups, relative to pre-pandemic months (January-March 2020) as well as in comparison to the same period last year (April-August 2019).”[62] For many, Covid-19 has decreased the security of their health. For ex-combatants, it has done so twofold—they risk both the virus and politically motivated murder. 

Could killings of ex-combatants motivate FARC members to abandon the peace process? History yields a clear answer—yes. The violent fate of the Unión Patriótica, and subsequent abandonment of peace processes and resurgence of conflict, prove an ominous precedent for the modern day. Then, deaths of thousands of UP representatives led FARC to abandon the Agreement of La Uribe and continue its insurgency. There is no clear reason why history might not repeat itself today. In fact, Ivan Marquez, one of the FARC dissident leaders, was once a political representative of the UP. The government’s previous failure to provide security is clearly fresh on the minds of many ex-combatants—and has proven sufficient cause to abandon peace in the past. 

In the words of the UN Verification Mission in Colombia, “the unrelenting violence against former combatants continues to take a toll on the reintegration process and the consolidation of peace more broadly.”[63] The hundreds of killings of ex-FARC combatants violate both the literal text of the peace agreement and the fundamental compact of DDR. Guarantees of security for both ex-combatants and social activists are emphasized in the peace deal, to which the concept of security (especially related to the practice of political opposition) is central. When combatants' lives are less secure at peace than they were at war, this inevitably leads some to question whether remaining committed to peace is worthwhile. Continuing murders have driven a sense of government betrayal on its side of the deal—which is to insure the lives and livelihoods of ex-combatants once they turned in their weapons. Sergio Jaramillo, the former High Commissioner for Peace, highlights the central problem created by the lack of security: “Some people may begin, at risk, to hesitate and prefer to get under the umbrella of some illegal organization to protect themselves from murder.”[64] If this occurs—if ex-combatants feel that taking up arms would protect them better than remaining in reintegration programs— then reincorporation fails and conflict worsens. 

Economic Opportunity 

Economic opportunity is another core pillar of the contract created by DDR. In exchange for handing over their guns, the source of livelihood and security for ex-combatants, the government ensures access to the above-ground economy and works to support the economic livelihoods of ex-combatants. This is a challenge in any country. Negative stigmatization of ex-combatants creates barriers to employment, as many businesses are unwilling to hire a former guerilla. Excombatants also tend to lack significant education, since many joined FARC at a young age or came from rural areas where education infrastructure is lacking. They do become skilled in one area which is in constant demand by other armed groups and cartels: violence. Together, these baseline problems make finding legal employment particularly difficult (and illegal employment particularly easy) for ex-combatants—yet gaining a sustainable source of income is vital to the economic half of “social and economic reintegration.” 

            Colombia’s economic turmoil has only added to this challenge. In one scenario mirroring the effect of Covid-19, economists at the University of Los Andes found that poverty could rise 15 percentage points relative to 2019, while inequality might rise to 0.574 on the Gini index—a setback of two decades.[65] Unemployment has skyrocketed, reaching a record high of 21.4% in May[66] and now standing at 15.8%, 5.6% higher than the same month last year.[67] Facing this unfriendly labor market, ex-combatants are even less likely to find work than before. The impact of this may not be felt immediately, since ex-combatants still receive a monthly allowance under the long-term reincorporation stage. Yet this is neither sustainable nor sufficient, as it amounts to a measly 90% of Colombia’s minimum wage—just over USD $200 per month. The peace agreement is structured so that ex-combatants can employ themselves in productive projects, which somewhat insulate them from the wider economic collapse. Over a third of ex-combatants have become involved in productive projects, making them integral to sustainable economic reintegration. But these too have come under new strain during the pandemic: the UN found that “half of the productive initiatives have been affected by the pandemic.”[68] 

            Education programs form another component of economic reintegration, aiming to equip ex-combatants with new skills apart from violence that can be used to gain sustainable employment. But in response to the Covid-19 lockdowns, schools across Colombia have closed. The UN reported in June that a number of educational programs included in the peace agreement have been placed on hold in light of the pandemic.[69] Internet infrastructure is also largely absent in many rural regions, a problem which disproportionately affects the educational outcomes of ex-combatants, since the great majority live in the countryside. 

  Given the rising challenges to sustainable economic reincorporation, ex-combatants may be tempted to abandon the reincorporation process and capitalize on their most lucrative skill set: conflict. Armed groups can reportedly offer four times more than what combatants make from the monthly stipend, drawing on funds gained from illicit activities like cocaine trafficking and illegal mining. The crop substitution program’s failings and the lack of state presence in rural areas have only enhanced the control and financing of armed groups. In recent months, the Covid-19 pandemic has also created new opportunities for recruitment, as rural families have been left with no source of income and children’s schools have closed down.[70] These factors result in the strengthening of armed groups and the lessening of economic benefits of reincorporation. Combined with the lack of security ex-combatants face, taking up a gun is increasingly seeming like a more profitable choice than remaining in reincorporation programs. 

A One-Sided Deal 

The convergence of the Duque administrations reticence to support the peace process, delays in implementation of crucial programs, the killings of ex-combatants, and decreased economic opportunity have contributed to a sense that the government is letting down its side of the contract established by DDR. In exchange for giving up their weapons, ex-combatants are supposed to receive from the government a replacement of the security and economic guarantees those weapons once provided. Yet in the minds of ex-combatants, these promises have proven empty. Scores of ex-FARC and peace activists have been murdered despite numerous provisions in the Final Agreement for their protection. Economic support has proven weak at best, while armed groups offer better salaries and greater security. The Covid-19 pandemic has exacerbated each of these problems, strengthening the violent spoiler groups that pose the greatest threat to peace while undermining programs for education and sustainable economic reintegration. So far, the vast majority of ex-combatants remain committed to the reintegration process. But unrest is growing. In October, thousands of ex-combatants marched from reintegration spaces across Colombia to Bogota in a “Pilgrimage for Life and Peace,” to protest the killings of demobilized FARC fighters since the 2016 peace deal. The pilgrimage movement rejected the “systematic murder of peace signatories” and “demands guarantees for [ex-FARC] lives.”[71] For now, ex-combatants are turning to peaceful protest to air their grievances and seek greater security. Whether the government can follow through on its guarantees remains to be seen. Recent statements from the FARC political party’s Twitter account underscore this sense of a skewed bargain: 

4 years after #AcuerdoDePaz we can tell you that we remain steadfast with peace, committed and committed to exhaustion with the implementation despite the failures of the Colombian state[72] 

Four years after signing the final peace agreement, an agreement marked by noncompliance by the government and the deaths of 242 ex-combatants who signed the peace, we continue to reaffirm our fight for peace with social justice for NEW COLOMBIA[73]

#GraciasAlAcuerdo thousands of us and we have returned to our families, however, today we have 242 free companions, whose lives were taken away by those who oppose peace, this happens when the Government applies a complicit indifference and stigmatizes us[74] 

The gov @IvanDuque must comply with and advance the implementation of the agreements made with communities. To pilgrims #PorLaVidaPorLaPaz it must materialize access to land for productive projects and especially protect their lives. For now they keep killing our companions[75]

We regret to report that yesterday two peace signatories and a family member were assassinated… Stop this killing! @IvanDuque[76]

May peace not cost us our lives![77] 

These statements from FARC reveal two clear patterns: growing discontent over the perception of government failures, and a continuing commitment to the peace agreement in spite of this. Excombatants are upholding their side of the deal. But they increasingly feel that the government (particularly Ivan Duque) is not upholding theirs, shifting the costs of peace onto the shoulders of the vulnerable ex-combatant population. This has only accelerated during the pandemic. For now, peace is holding—but if insecurity continues to worsen, and economic opportunities dim further, the challenges to reintegration and the sense of government betrayal may trump excombatants commitment to the peace process. The critical process of reintegration would fail. 

Possible Outcomes 

There are three main paths down which Colombia may go: a reconstitution of the FARC and resumption of formal conflict with the government; the amplification of low-level violence by a growing number of smaller armed groups; and in the event the peace deal succeeds, lessening violence. Of these, the second is seeming increasingly likely. 

Should ex-combatants become so disenchanted with the government’s failings that they collectively abandon collective reincorporation, all the way to the highest ranks of the party, FARC could reform as a formal group and resume conflict with the government. This would be extraordinarily devastating, considering the first conflict cost the lives of a quarter million people and lasted for half a century. But because a collective remobilization of FARC would necessarily involve stimulation by leadership, and leadership has grown seemingly comfortable with peaceful mechanisms of politics, this path seems improbable. 

More likely, facing increasing insecurity and decreasing economic opportunity, excombatants will slowly trickle out of reincorporation processes and join or form illegal armed groups, whether those are traffickers, FARC dissidents, or the ELN. Those who remain within the reincorporation process will be killed at higher rates, feeding a vicious cycle which will hasten the unraveling of reintegration. Eventually, if a majority of ex-combatants abandon reintegration—the core of the peace deal—the agreement will collapse, particularly if Duque’s administration uses ex-combatants’ return to violence as justification to abandon other peace programs. The structural conditions which caused violence in the past will persist.  

Somewhat counterintuitively, the second option might actually be worse than a formal reconstitution of FARC. If ex-combatants slowly drain out of reintegration programs, the result will be similar to what happened to the AUC: a once-unified group with strong command and control structures will rupture into fragmented and diffuse factions. These groups are no longer motivated by ideology or moral purpose, because they alone will never be able to defeat the state. Rather, their raison d’etre is self enrichment. They exist solely to leech the resources of rural territories, much as dissident factions and BACRIM compete for access to trafficking routes and illegal mining in the spaces FARC left as part of the peace deal. This can already be seen in the diversity of FARC dissident groups. Such an outcome would be uniquely deleterious, since similarly large amounts of death and displacement would occur but with no motive except exploitation, no central or cooperated strategy except destruction, and limited hope for peace. With FARC, the government could reach a negotiated settlement by making concessions to the ideological motives of the guerillas—a settlement that was only reached once both sides concluded they could not win. But with smaller groups, the government can hope to win. Furthermore, these organizations exist to enrich themselves on the spoils of conflict and plunder, meaning they likely bear little desire for disarmament and demobilization. Low level conflict will persist indefinitely, extracting a heavy toll. Trapped in a gray zone between formal war and genuine peace, the people of Colombia will suffer yet more underserved tragedy.  

Finally, against all odds, ex-combatants may remain committed to reintegration. Four years after the signing of the peace deal, and in spite of numerous challenges which started early in the implementation process, the majority of ex-combatants today stand in favor of the peace process. Perhaps the government will pick up the pace of implementation, find ways to protect ex-combatants, and better support productive projects for ex-combatants. It goes without saying that this outcome would be the best by far. So what actions could be taken to secure the future of reincorporation?  

Possible Solutions 

The best solution is simply to follow through on the commitments of the peace agreement. The Final Agreement provides a roadmap for spurring economic development; bringing rural areas and the marginalized populations who inhabit them under state control; dismantling norms of political violence; and peacefully and sustainably reincorporating ex-FARC combatants into the economy and society. Were the government to fully and quickly implement the entirety of the programs stipulated in the agreement, peace would probably be achieved and many Colombian citizens would see their lives improved. But given the progress of implementation so far, and the additional challenges posed by Covid-19, this seems unlikely. In light of this, there are two main approaches the central government could adopt in the short run which would decrease the likelihood of reintegration failing. 

The first is to prioritize security guarantees contained in the peace agreement. Uncertainty over the very security of their lives is driving ex-combatants’ feeling that the government is not holding up their side of the deal more than any other issue, fueling a strong sense of abandonment. Consequently, stopping the murders of ex-combatants and peace activists is the absolute most important step. Any approach must involve protection of ex-combatants themselves, but also concerted efforts to stamp out the spoiler groups responsible for the murders. The government should continue peace negotiations with the ELN—one group responsible for murdering ex-combatants—hopefully resulting in another DDR-based agreement. As part of a wider campaign to increase state presence in rural areas, it should then seek to reduce the ranks of the various paramilitary and dissident groups. 

Second, ex-combatants need increased access to land for productive projects, which the UN has called “an urgent requirement for the sustainability of the reintegration process,” particularly because the majority of ex-combatants seek to become farmers.[78] Right now, most of the AECTRs are on rented land. The government has succeeded in purchasing land for one reincorporation space in Tolima, and it should continue these efforts. Purchasing of land for AECTRs could mesh with increased security for these spaces. Some progress has been made: the Duque administration recently released Decree 1543, which creates avenues for ex-combatants who remain committed to reincorporation to gain access to land.[79] 

Unfortunately, even with some miraculous strengthening of political will, in the wake of the pandemic the Colombian government may simply lack the capacity to implement the peace deal. It may (justifiably) prioritize economic recovery over the expensive and laborious process of implementing the Final Agreement. Should this scenario unfold, the burden of peace will continue to fall increasingly to ex-combatants themselves. The success of reintegration may rest upon the strength of a single, unmeasurable variable: willpower. To save peace, ex-combatants might find the only step they can take is to remain steadfastly committed to the Final Agreement regardless of the personal sacrifice this requires. Finally, given the failings of the central government, departments and communities could play a greater role in reintegration going forward, working to provide protection, land, and funding to ex-combatants as they pursue productive projects. Though not ideal, a community-centric approach could provide excombatants with just enough support that peace remains preferable to re-armament.  

Conclusion 

In 2012, Colombia embarked on an ambitious mission to end a half-century long conflict and structurally transform much of the country to address the conditions—land inequality, state weakness, and norms of political violence—that had originally created violence. The resultant 2016 peace agreement contained broad stipulations for rural reform, economic development, state-building, and an expansive DDR program including the social and economic reincorporation of ex-combatants. Four years later, the process faces numerous challenges. Most important among these are obstacles to the reincorporation process, since reincorporation alone determines the fate of peace. If ex-combatants fail to reintegrate, they return to conflict, throwing Colombia into war at a time when peace is desperately needed. Reintegration is best conceived of as a contract between the government and ex-combatants which is initially established by disarmament, wherein ex-combatants turn over their weapons in exchange for government guarantees of economic opportunity and security. The success of this process is determined by the maintenance of political will on both sides; so long as the state remains willing and able to safeguard the livelihoods of ex-combatants, and so long as ex-combatants remain committed to reintegration, DDR succeeds. But if the government lets down its end of the bargain, and excombatants begin to believe a gun might provide greater economic or physical security, incentives to abandon the peace process eventually outweigh their commitment to reintegration. This is the central challenge peace in Colombia faces today. Since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, the power of armed spoilers in rural areas has grown, contributing to continued killings of ex-combatants and peace activists. Facing an economic downturn of massive proportions, ex-combatants' prospects in the above-ground economy are dimming while demand for their specific skill set stays high. A renewed government push for peace is needed, yet the administration of president Ivan Duque openly questions the peace process and has found in the pandemic a reason to put peace on the back-burner. The structural conditions which originally fueled conflict still exist—in fact, the pandemic has only exacerbated inequality and state weakness in rural areas. The most likely outcome is somewhere between war and peace: excombatants will slowly abandon the peace process, contributing to the growth of multitudinous criminal armed groups who will continue to fight for control in the countryside.

Because it threatens the lifeblood of the peace agreement more than any other issue— failure of another aspect of the Final Agreement would only prompt a return to conflict if it caused reincorporation to collapse—reintegration of ex-FARC combatants is the most important issue facing Colombia today. Of all the possible timelines Colombia may go down in the near future, one in which widespread conflict resumes is surely the worst. Its immediate impacts will be the death and abuse and terror inflicted on the same long-suffering communities which have been marginalized for much of Colombia’s history—the rural families and small farmers whose lands are pillaged and whose blood is spilled. But ultimately, every Colombian will suffer. Renewed conflict will upset the working of the economy during a crucial period of recovery, both by disrupting the operation of businesses and by diverting government funds towards fighting armed groups. The thousands of people who will be displaced by increased conflict will flood into a strained labor market already beset by high unemployment rates. State presence in rural areas will falter further, as insecurity begets insecurity and armed groups battle each other for territory and resources. This new conflict—a more fractious, less ideological, greedy war— will be even harder to resolve than its predecessor. Facing dozens of distinct groups with no goal except their own self-enrichment and survival, the government will be hard-set to negotiate another peaceful settlement and too weak to suppress all of these groups militarily. Yet perhaps the importance of reintegration is best demonstrated by the opportunity costs of its failure. If the Final Agreement succeeded, every citizen of Colombia could experience a majority of their life in a condition seldom seen by the Republic: peace. The government could establish a monopoly over force across the entire territory, closing the urban-rural gap by investing in the PDETs and following through on its promise to eliminate the paramilitary phenomenon. By funding crop substitution programs established by the peace agreement, the state could finally nip the cocaine trade at its source, making legal farming more profitable than growing coca. Thousands of ex combatants could be reintegrated as productive members of society, and their ideology could be peacefully incorporated into the political system. The gender and ethnicity-based approach of the Final Agreement could translate into a more equitable, accepting society. And most importantly, the structural causes which fueled conflict for so many decades—land inequality, political exclusion, state weakness, and norms of political violence—could be resolved. The potential for future violence, the number of grievances which could compel someone to take up a gun, could be greatly reduced.  Maybe the exceptionally broad scope of the Final Agreement doomed it to fail, at least to some extent. Yet peace will never succeed without a recognition of the structural causes of war and a concerted effort to redress them. Fixing reintegration programs alone is a stop-gap measure, a band-aid to prevent an imminent return to widespread conflict. Any sustainable peace will require much wider implementation of the stipulations of the Final Agreement, each of which faces daunting challenges of its own. But should ex-combatants abandon their commitment to reintegration in the face of threats from violent spoiler groups and dimming economic prospects, conflict will resume immediately, and the Final Agreement is forfeited entirely. This makes reintegration the vital fulcrum upon which Colombia’s future rests—if it succeeds, impetus for peace will cascade forth, and if it fails, the inertia towards war will become unstoppable. 


[1] “Colombia surpasses 1 million COVID-19 cases,” Al Jazeera, October 25, 2020. 

[2] Clemente Garavito, “Colombia,” Encyclopedia Britannica, December 15, 2020. The political entity that would become the modern Colombian state went through numerous iterations. I refer to the most recent name for clarity, but it is important to note that Colombian history starts long before 1886.  

[3] James D. Henderson, When Colombia Bled (Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press, 1985), 51.   4Harvey F. Kline, Between the Sword and the Wall (Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press, 2020),

9. 

[4] Kenneth L. Sokoloff and Stanley L. Engerman, "History Lessons: Institutions, Factors Endowments, and Paths of Development in the New World," The Journal of Economic Perspectives 14, no. 3 (2000): 221.  

[5] Kline, 10.  

[6] Kline, 12.  

[7] Peasants or farmers in rural areas  9Kline, 11.  

[8] Kline, 16.  

[9] Kline, 18.  

[10] “AUC,” Colombia Reports, December 5, 2016. 

[11] Adriaan Alsema, “Total economic cost of 52 years of war in Colombia $151B: Study,” Colombia Reports, September 26, 2016. 

[12] Kline, 19.  

[13] The exact number of UP members killed is disputed. 

[14] Enzo Nussio, “Learning from Shortcomings: The Demobilization of Paramilitaries in Colombia,” Journal of Peacebuilding & Development 6 (2012): 88. Some allege that this number (as published by the Uribe administration) is heavily inflated, so it should be taken with a grain of salt.  17Nussio, 89. 

[15] Kline, 38.  

[16] Sibylla Brodzinsky, “Colombia signs historic peace deal with Farc,” The Guardian, November 24, 2016.  20Nicholas Casey, “Colombia’s Congress Approves Peace Accord with FARC,” The New York Times, November 30, 2016. 

[17] Robert Muggah and Chris O’Donnell, “Next Generation Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration,” Stability: International Journal of Security and Development 4 (2015): 2. 

[18] “The Cartagena Contribution to Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration” (Cartagena, Colombia, June 2009), 3.  

[19] M. Knight and A. Ozerdem, “Guns, camps, and cash: disarmament, demobilization and reinsertion of former combatants in transition from war to peace,” Journal of Peace Research 41 (2004): 501.

[20] “Cartagena Contribution,” 5.

[21] Muggah and O’Donnell, 6. 

[22] “The Role of the United Nations Peacekeeping in Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration,” Report of the Secretary-General, February 11, 2000, 1. 

[23] Mark Knight, “Expanding the DDR Model: Politics and Organisations,” Journal of Security Sector Management 6 (March 2008), 8.  

[24] “Role of the United Nations Peacekeeping,” 1. 

[25] “Integrated Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Standards,” United Nations, August 1, 2006, 422.   30Because Colombia has so many ex-combatants from a multitude of different groups who demobilized at different times, different processes for reintegration exist. In the context of Colombian law, “reintegration” refers to programs for individually demobilized guerillas and ex-paramilitaries; “reincorporation” refers to programs specific to exFARC members who demobilized collectively under the 2016 peace agreement. In this paper, I use the terms reintegration and reincorporation interchangeably to refer to the processes of the 2016 peace deal, a decision I made because DDR literature predominantly uses the word “reintegration.”   

[26] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict and Build a Stable and Lasting Peace,” November 24, 2016, 8.  

[27] Presidential Council for Stabilization and Consolidation,“La implementación de la política de Paz con Legalidad es seria, verificable y reconocida por las comunidades en los territorios y la cooperación internacional, afirma el Consejero Presidencial para la Establización,” February 26, 2020, 2. 

[28] Agency for Reincorporation and Normalization, “ARN in Numbers August 2020,” August 31, 2020, 6.  34Agency for Reincorporation and Normalization, “Reincorporation,” Accessed December 18, 2020. 

[29] “ARN in Numbers August 2020,” 6. 

[30] United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia, “Report of the Secretary-General,” March 26, 2020, 7.  

[31] Agency for Reincorporation and Normalization, “ARN in Numbers October 2020,” October 31, 2020, 6. 

[32] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 8.   39“Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 79.

[33] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 80.

[34] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 3. 

[35] Agency for Reincorporation and Normalization, “Reincorporation Glossary,” Accessed December 18, 2020. 

[36] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 104. 

[37] Felipe Puerta and Maria Paula Chaparro, “A Death Foretold: Colombia’s Crop Substitution Program,” InSight Crime, April 1, 2019. 

[38] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 3.

[39] “La implementación de la política de Paz con Legalidad,” 2. 

[40] “Gallup Poll #131 Colombia,” Gallup, June, 2019.  

[41] “The Evolution of the Ex-FARC Mafia,” InSight Crime, November 11, 2019. 

[42] “Peace Accord Implementation in Colombia Continues to Progress Two Years In,” Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, April 9, 2019, 1. 

[43] Felipe Puerta and Maria Paula Chaparro. 

[44] Adriaan Alsema, “Colombia pursues 5-year coronavirus recovery plan,” Colombia Reports, November 12, 2020. 

[45] John Stedman, “Spoiler Problems in Peace Processes,” International Security 22 (Fall 1997): 5.  

[46] “Los ejércitos ilegales que enfrentará la nueva cúpula militar,” El Tiempo, December 21, 2018. 

[47] “Los ejércitos ilegales que enfrentará la nueva cúpula militar.”

[48] “Disidencia de las FARC estarían en más de 10 departamentos, según informe de inteligencia militar,” Noticias Caracol, October 12, 2018. 

[49] “FARC Dissident Groups,” Colombia Peace, WOLA, April 24, 2020. 

[50] “Colombia: Gulf Clan,” Research Directorate, Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, Accessed December 18, 2020. 

[51] “ERPAC,” Colombia Reports, April 1, 2017. 

[52] “ELN,” InSight Crime, October 27, 2020. 

[53] “EPL,” InSight Crime, March 14, 2018. 

[54] “FARC Dissident Groups.” 

[55] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, December 19, 2020. Since the first drafting of this paper, five FARC excombatants have been killed. Here, I use the unofficial number reported by FARC party statements. I chose to use this number because official verification of each attack takes time—the latest UN report verified 224 killings—and because what really matters is ex-combatant perceptions of their own insecurity, which are likely more influenced by FARC’s own numbers than by official counts. See “Report of the Secretary-General,” United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia, September 25, 2020. 

[56] United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia, “Report of the Secretary-General,” June 26, 2020, 8. 

[57] “Los espacios de reincorporación de las Farc con más amenazas,” El Espectador, July 9, 2020. 

[58] Adriaan Alsema, “More than 1000 community leaders, human rights defenders assassinated during Colombia’s peace process: report,” Colombia Reports, August 24, 2020. 

[59] “Criminal Governance Under Coronavirus,” InSight Crime, September 3, 2020. 

[60] “Report of the Secretary-General,” June 26, 2020. 

[61] “Criminal Governance Under Coronavirus.”

[62] Carolina Castro et al., “Understanding the Killing of Social Leaders in Colombia During Covid-19,” Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, 2020. 

[63] “Report of the Secretary-General,” September 25, 2020.

[64] Serjio Jaramillo, former High Commissioner for Peace, quoted in Armando Niera, “¿Cuál es el balance del acuerdo de paz tras cuatro años de su firma?,” El Tiempo, November 24, 2020.

[65] “Macroeconomic Note No.20,” 3.  

[66] Adriaan Alsema,“Employment in Colombia barely recovering from COVID-19 collapse,” Colombia Reports, September 1, 2020.

[67] “Gran encuesta integrada de hogares (GEIH) Mercado laboral - Empleo y desempleo,” DANE, Accessed November 28, 2020.

[68] “Report of the Secretary-General,” June 26, 2020. 

[69] “Report of the Secretary-General,” June 26, 2020. 

[70] Lara Loaiza, “Armed Groups in Colombia Target Children Amid Pandemic,” InSight Crime, June 22, 2020. 

[71] “Así fue la llegada de los excombatientes de las Farc a Bogotá,” El Espectador, November 1, 2020.  

[72] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, 8:22 PM, November 24, 2020.   

[73] FARC Party Bogotá (@farc_bogota), Twitter, November 24, 2020.  

[74] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, 9:09 AM, November 24, 2020.  

[75] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, November 22, 2020.

[76] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, November 16, 2020.

[77] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, November 15, 2020.

[78] “Report of the Secretary General,” September 25, 2020. 

[79] “Gobierno expide decreto: excombatientes tendrán acceso a tierras,” El Tiempo, November 24, 2020.  

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“Gran encuesta integrada de hogares (GEIH) Mercado laboral - Empleo y desempleo.” DANE. Accessed November 28, 2020. https://www.dane.gov.co/index.php/en/statistics-by-topic1/labor-market/empleo-y-desempleo. 

Henderson, James D. When Colombia Bled. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press, 1985. 

Kline, Harvey F. Between the Sword and the Wall. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press, 2020. 

Knight, M. and A. Ozerdem. “Guns, camps, and cash: disarmament, demobilization and reinsertion of former combatants in transition from war to peace.” Journal of Peace Research 41 (2004): 499-516.

Knight, Mark. “Expanding the DDR Model: Politics and Organisations.” Journal of Security Sector Management 6 (March 2008). 

Loaiza, Lara. “Armed Groups in Colombia Target Children Amid Pandemic.” InSight Crime. June 22, 2020. https://www.insightcrime.org/news/brief/coronavirus-recruitment-minorscolombia/. 

“Los ejércitos ilegales que enfrentará la nueva cúpula militar. El Tiempo. December 21, 2018.

https://www.eltiempo.com/justicia/investigacion/los-ejercitos-ilegales-que-enfrentara-lanueva-cupula-militar-305714.

“Los espacios de reincorporación de las Farc con más amenazas.” El Espectador. July 9, 2020.

https://www.elespectador.com/colombia2020/pais/los-espacios-de-reincorporacion-delas-farc-con-mas-amenazas/.

“Macroeconomic Note No.20: Effects on poverty and inequality of Covid-19 in Colombia.” Economics faculty, Universidad de los Andes. May 18, 2020. https://www.scribd.com/document/463531085/Nota-Macroeconomica-Universidad-deLos-Andes.

Muggah, Robert and Chris O’Donnell. “Next Generation Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration.” Stability: International Journal of Security and Development 4 (2015): 112. 

Niera, Armando. “¿Cuál es el balance del acuerdo de paz tras cuatro años de su firma?” El Tiempo. November 24, 2020. https://www.eltiempo.com/politica/proceso-depaz/acuerdo-de-paz-sergio-jaramillo-habla-del-proceso-al-cumplir-cuatro-anos-550672.  

Nussio, Enzo. “Learning from Shortcomings: The Demobilization of Paramilitaries in Colombia.” Journal of Peacebuilding & Development 6 (2012): 88-92. 

“Peace Accord Implementation in Colombia Continues to Progress Two Years In.” Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies. April 9, 2019.

https://kroc.nd.edu/assets/316152/190409_pam_media_advisory_final.pdf.

Presidential Council for Stabilization and Consolidation. “La implementación de la política de Paz con Legalidad es seria, verificable y reconocida por las comunidades en los territorios y la cooperación internacional, afirma el Consejero Presidencial para la Establización.” February 26, 2020. https://colombiapeace.org/files/200226_pres_co.pdf. 

Puerta, Felipe and Maria Paula Chaparro. “A Death Foretold: Colombia’s Crop Substitution Program.” InSight Crime. April 1, 2019. https://www.insightcrime.org/news/analysis/adeath-foretold-colombias-crop-substitution-program/. 

“The Role of the United Nations Peacekeeping in Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration.” Report of the Secretary-General. February 11, 2000. 

Sokoloff, Kenneth L., and Stanley L. Engerman. "History Lessons: Institutions, Factors Endowments, and Paths of Development in the New World." The Journal of Economic Perspectives 14, no. 3 (2000): 217-32. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2646928. 

Stedman, John. “Spoiler Problems in Peace Processes.” International Security 22 (Fall 1997): 553.  

United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia. “Report of the Secretary-General.” March 26, 2020. https://colombiapeace.org/files/200326_unsg.pdf. 

United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia. “Report of the Secretary-General.” June 26, 2020. https://colombia.unmissions.org/sites/default/files/n2015182.pdf. 

United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia. “Report of the Secretary-General.” September 25, 2020. https://colombia.unmissions.org/sites/default/files/en_-_n2024003.pdf.  

United Nations. “Integrated Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Standards.” August 1, 2006. 

by Alexandra Trotter

Any time several problems appear simultaneously, it is difficult to know which to fix first. The ongoing coronavirus pandemic has hurt Colombia in so many ways that before the government can debate how to fix a problem, they have to debate which one to fix first. There is an argument to be made for focusing on each of several issues. For example, is the worst problem education access or the peace process? It is hard to say whether decreased access to education or a slowdown of the peace process is worse overall, especially when their causes and effects are related. An educated population is essential to a peaceful society, but it is also difficult to maintain a good education system without peaceful surroundings. Uninterrupted access to education, however, is more important than an entirely peaceful climate for ongoing societal development.

Even long before the pandemic, education was inaccessible to many Colombians, whether because they had to work to help support their families or because they were recruited by armed groups before finishing school.[1] In rural areas, less than 80% of children between ages three and five attend school.[2] Furthermore, the Colombian government spends only about 4.5% of its GDP on education,[3] as opposed to Norway’s 8%[4] and Sweden’s 7.7%.[5] At the moment, the situation is much worse than these statistics depict, because the pandemic forced most schools online and only 64.1% of Colombians use the internet.[6] Under current conditions, a significant portion of the country is without access to education, and may be so for the foreseeable future.

Education is the foundation of everything else in a society and interruptions to education cause damage to a generation that is difficult to ever recover from. Khan Academy’s founder, Salman Khan, gave an interview in which he offered advice for schools: 

Focus on the basics and do those things really, really well. The basics are reading, writing and math. If kids are able to progress in those, or at a minimum not atrophy in those, they’re going to be able to pick up where they left off in other subjects. But if those things really degrade, everything is going to suffer. Those very fundamental things are hard to fill in later, and that puts you on a slower track, frankly for the rest of your life. [7]

The importance of these three basic subjects cannot be overstated.

Reading, writing, and elementary math are so commonly mentioned together that “reading, writing, and ‘rithmatic” is a standard phrase, and they are considered the core school subjects for a reason. Writing is necessary for many jobs and for communication in general. Reading is so important that literacy is one of the measures of how developed a country is, and I cannot imagine how I would get through life without it. It is essential for reading signs, staying informed, nearly all jobs, and so much more. Math is often dismissed as less critical than reading and writing, but it would be difficult to deal with money, for example, without an understanding of basic mathematics. Furthermore, logic is often associated with math and incorporated into math curricula. Critical thinking skills, which are an extension of logical thinking, are necessary for a stable society. 

Individuals learn countless helpful skills in school and at home that would be severely missed if they went completely neglected. If nobody ever learned to cook, we would have a problem. However, someone who has never cooked a single meal can still become a good cook as an adult; there is no magic “cut-off” for learning this skill. Younger people might have an easier time memorizing the names of ingredients, but this kind of delay is not dangerous. Similarly, a study of history is important, but it can be interrupted and resumed later without doing any real damage. Most skills share this quality, and are similarly achievable at any age. 

Reading, writing, and math, on the other hand, are well known to be much more difficult to learn for older children or adults than for younger children. Young children learn to read, write, and do arithmetic with so little effort that most of us cannot remember how we learned, whereas there are teachers, classes, and entire organizations dedicated to teaching adults to read. Clearly, then, these are subjects that should not be interrupted if at all possible, lest children leave this critical phase of development without these skills.

Other issues clamor for attention alongside education. Shouldn’t the government focus on reducing unemployment, or hastening the peace process? The answer is yes, of course, but education should be a higher priority because improvements in education will help solve other social problems like these. Additionally, solutions to either one would be ineffective or unsustainable without an improvement in education.

Unemployment problems come in three main forms: insufficient income from one’s work; lack of unemployment opportunities, whether from inability to find a job at all or from inability to work as much as desired; and a potential workforce the market is failing to take advantage of. These problems may arise for two distinct reasons: it may simply be that more people want work than there are available jobs; alternatively, there may be enough total jobs, but they are not well-suited for the available workers. For the most part, education can only mitigate the latter problem, and it can do so either by providing training (the basic skills) or by altering the general mindset people have toward work.[8] Better educated people are more likely to create new jobs for others as well, but as this is an indirect result of education and takes place further in the future, it is not as relevant to this discussion. Both primary and secondary education can give people necessary occupational training or the foundation thereof, but individual mindsets are shaped more by primary education, so early education emerges again as a necessary feature of a society. When there are more people who want work than there are jobs, the government can specifically work to create more opportunities, but this situation may be improved much more readily once the workforce is a better match for the existing jobs.

As for the peace process, there is no point in trying to bring about a peaceful society without establishing a good education system first, because the social fabric will simply disintegrate in its absence. It has been proven throughout history that without an educated populace, a stable society is unlikely. Better education leads to better wellbeing, mental health, and problem-solving skills, which all enhance a society’s ability to address conflict without resorting to violence. Furthermore, children who consistently attend school are exposed to people of various backgrounds and mindsets, which prepares them for life’s interactions much better than education provided by a small group of similar people (a family, for example) is able to.[9]​ 

Countries often address short-term economic crises by reducing investment in public education and infrastructure, which is a quick way to save money at the time, and may even be without short term consequences. However, this method of reducing budget obligations is incredibly short-sighted and even dangerous. It starts a cycle of inadequate education access, unemployment, and lack of progress, which only causes even less money to be available for public education spending. The results of this cycle range from economic instability to rampant social instability and even violence, as inequity in education engenders resentment and conflict. Preventing this perilous feedback cycle, or stopping it as soon as possible if it has already begun, is one of the best ways to provide a peaceful environment.[10]

In the modern world, expansive access to the internet is essential to education. In light of the ongoing pandemic, which has closed many schools and may permanently change attitudes towards education, internet availability is even more critical. In Colombia, internet access has increased rapidly in recent years, but this growth has begun to slacken. While about 65% of Colombians are connected to the internet (as previously mentioned), in the lowest income group this drops to only around one in five people. The problem worsens in the nation’s many rural areas, where it is difficult to run cables or construct mobile cell towers; only about 10 percent of people in rural communities have any internet access. Even for those in rural areas who have it, average download speed is among the slowest in the region.[11]​ 

Furthermore, even if the infrastructure is there, internet access is expensive for Colombians. In 2019, most Colombians used mobile devices, not computers, and accessed the internet with mobile data. At the time, 1 GB of mobile data cost about $6.50. When compared to the minimum wage in Colombia, about $260 per month, it is not surprising that the internet was and continues to be inaccessible for so much of Colombia.[12] All these factors limit the viability of delivering education over the internet, especially for poor or rural families. 

There are dozens of critically important issues demanding attention from the Colombian government and people. The question here, though, is which of these needs focus most urgently. Employment troubles and the peace process have taken years and may well take years more to address properly, so in the grand scheme of things, a few more months or even years will not be particularly noticeable. In other words, since these are broad longer-term goals, it is possible for them to take a little longer without doing major damage, although of course that is far from ideal. On the other hand, early education has been established as something where every month matters, so a gap of several months induced by a pandemic is a big deal. In a situation where every problem is urgent and there is insufficient money for any full solution, a nation must calculate which issues are most urgent, focusing their energy and funds there first. In this case, early education is most urgent and everything else is slightly less so; it follows that the government should focus time and money there right away. Education is a constant necessity, and even a tiny interruption does long-lasting and irrevocable damage.

What can be done? Education access and quality are persistent problems throughout the world, and several possible solutions have been suggested. Normally, education is either public or private. Public education is usually accessible to everyone, barring problems like transportation, but its quality often suffers because there is no incentive for any one school to offer a better education than the other schools nearby. Especially in low income countries like

Colombia, public schools fail to deliver the services that residents of wealthy countries have come to expect. Private education partially solves the problem of quality by forcing schools to do their best to keep students and parents happy, lest they lose enrollment and therefore tuition money, but these schools are usually only accessible by the highest-income families due to their high price tag. 

There is a third option part way between public and private schooling, which Colombia has employed in the past: the voucher system. Ideally, this is a way of combining certain benefits of private and public education, potentially achieving the best of both worlds. In one proposed implementation, the government funds education, but instead of funding school systems directly, it gives out vouchers to parents. These may then be redeemed to partially or fully cover a child’s tuition at the private school of the parents’ choice. This allows everyone to access education, but leaves schools with an incentive to provide good education, as parents are likely to pursue enrollment for their children at the best school possible. This is intended to foster competition between schools, each aiming to offer the best education and thus gather the most voucher money. In a slightly different formulation of the model, schools can be reimbursed directly by the government based on how many students they have enrolled. One version might be more efficient and easier to set up than the other version for a government, depending on how its education funding is organized internally, but since they accomplish the same thing in almost the same way, there is no real reason to advocate one over another when encouraging a government to implement a voucher system.[13]

In Colombia, an educational voucher system, called the PACES program, was implemented in 1991 and ran for the bulk of the decade. This remains one of the largest school voucher pilot programs in recent history, and showed promising results. Over 125,000 students were provided with vouchers for more than half the cost of private secondary school, many of which were distributed via lottery. A study of outcomes for participating students found that they repeated fewer grades, attended more school, and had generally better test scores. This program brought the superior quality of private education into reach for many families, and reduced education expenditures for many more who would have sent children to private schools regardless. Participation was projected to significantly increase future wages for students, exceeding the cost of the program to the government and families.[14] It is reasonable that restarting such a program on a larger scale in Colombia today would have similarly positive effects.

This method has not been tried extensively, so there is a limit to the statistical validity of the data, but many large scale voucher programs, including PACES and several examples in Europe, have shown positive outcomes. Even so, it would be important not to take too much funding away from public schools just in case the option fails. If public schools were completely abandoned, it would likely be prohibitively difficult to reinstate them later. With careful planning, however, the voucher method could certainly improve the state of education in

Colombia. As another example, Chile has had a universal school voucher system for decades. Outcomes there have improved significantly since the program began controlling for income by offering larger vouchers to low income families; this is one possible improvement to naive or simply designed voucher distribution. This improvement is also an effective argument against those who say that a voucher would fail to solve anything because private schools could just raise their prices, for example.[15]

An educational voucher program will likely help the education system serve students more effectively in general, and investment in teacher training could help as well,[16] especially with transparency about how exactly that money is spent, but there is more that can be done right now to solve the specific problems the pandemic caused. The government can and should invest in making internet access broadly available throughout the country. Such an improvement would reduce the number of Colombian children who are locked out of education entirely, simply because of where they live or their socioeconomic status. 

Many possible methods exist to broaden internet access around the world, such as government investment in cell towers or government regulation of internet service providers’ prices. Education is one of the most important uses for the internet worldwide; improving internet connectivity will be instrumental to enhancing education in Colombia. It will help Colombia in countless other ways as well, from encouraging freedom of expression to assisting the spread of information, both of which are important for a stable society.

These solutions are not quick, easy, or cheap, but they will be worth it. It is impossible to overstate the importance of education in a healthy society, and in order for Colombia to work through its struggles and progress in the future, the problems with its education system must be addressed as soon as possible.


[1] Luke Taylor, “How Colombia’s armed groups are exploiting COVID-19 to recruit children,” The New Humanitarian, The New Humanitarian, September 10, 2020, https://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/news-feature/2020/09/10/Colombia-conflict-armed-groups-child-recruitment.

[2] “Education,” Colombia Reports, Colombia Reports, September 24, 2019, https://colombiareports.com/education-statistics/.

[3] “Colombia,” UNData, United Nations, Published 2020, Accessed December 9, 2020, http://data.un.org/en/iso/co.html.

[4] “Norway,” UNData, United Nations, Published 2020, Accessed December 9, 2020,​         http://data.un.org/en/iso/no.html. 

[5] “Sweden,” UNData, United Nations, Published 2020, Accessed December 9, 2020, http://data.un.org/en/iso/se.html. 

[6] “Colombia,” UNData.

[7] Salman Khan, “Khan Academy’s Sal Khan shares advice for online learning: Do less, and turn off the camera,” interview by Heather Kelly, The Washington Post, ​            ​August 31, 2020, https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2020/08/31/khan-academy-remote-learning/.

[8] Louis Emmerij, “Some Reflections on the Link between Education and Employment,” Higher Education​ ​ 1, no. 4 (1972): 483-95, accessed October 27, 2020, http://www.jstor.org/stable/3446043.

[9] Lana Khattab, School for Stability: Examining the role of education in fostering social stability in Lebanon​              (International Alert, 2017), https://www.international-alert.org/publications/school-for-stability. 

[10] Miemie Winn Byrd, Education, Economic Growth and Social Stability: Why the Three Are Inseparable​  (Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, 2012), 102, https://apcss.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Chapter8.pdf. 

[11] “New ICT laws and attention to innovation increase Colombia's internet coverage,” Oxford Business Group, Oxford Business Group, 2019, accessed December 11, 2020, https://oxfordbusinessgroup.com/overview/public-and-private-sector-initiatives-have-seen-positive-results-increasin g-internet-coverage-and.

[12] Sebastian Erb, “Colombia is becoming an online country, but a digital divide still separates cities from the countryside,” DW Akademie, Deutsche Welle, February 18, 2019, https://www.dw.com/en/colombia-is-becoming-an-online-country-but-a-digital-divide-still-separates-cities-from-the -countryside/a-47563079.

[13] Varun Gauri and Ayesha Vawda, “Vouchers for Basic Education in Developing Economies: An Accountability Perspective,” ​The World Bank Research Observer​ 19, no. 2 (2004): 259-80, Accessed October 27, 2020, http://www.jstor.org/stable/3986560.

[14] Joshua Angrist et al., "Vouchers for Private Schooling in Colombia: Evidence from a Randomized Natural Experiment," ​The American Economic Review​ 92, no. 5 (2002): 1537, accessed December 18, 2020, https://economics.mit.edu/files/24.

[15] Richard J. Murnane et al, “The Consequences of Educational Voucher Reform in Chile,” NBER, National Bureau of Economic Research, June 2017, https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w23550/w23550.pdf.

[16] Constance Berry Newman, Equipping Africa’s Primary School Learners for the Future​ ​, Report, Atlantic Council, 2017, 18-22, accessed October 27, 2020, http://www.jstor.org/stable/resrep16765.9.

Bibliography

Angrist, Joshua, Eric Bettinger, Erik Bloom, Elizabeth King, and Michael Kremer. "Vouchers for Private Schooling in Colombia: Evidence from a Randomized Natural Experiment." The American Economic Review​ 92, no. 5 (2002): 1537. Accessed December 18, 2020.

https://economics.mit.edu/files/24.

Byrd, Miemie Winn. Education, Economic Growth and Social Stability: Why the Three Are​         Inseparable.​ (Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, 2012). https://apcss.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Chapter8.pdf.

“Colombia.” UNData. United Nations, Published 2020. Accessed December 9, 2020.

http://data.un.org/en/iso/co.html.

“Education.” Colombia Reports. Colombia Reports, September 24, 2019.

https://colombiareports.com/education-statistics/.

Emmerij, Louis. “Some Reflections on the Link between Education and Employment.” Higher​    Education​ 1, no. 4 (1972): 483-95. Accessed October 27, 2020.

http://www.jstor.org/stable/3446043.

Erb, Sebastian. “Colombia is becoming an online country, but a digital divide still separates cities from the countryside.” DW Akademie. Deutsche Welle, February 18, 2019.

https://www.dw.com/en/colombia-is-becoming-an-online-country-but-a-digital-divide-sti ll-separates-cities-from-the-countryside/a-47563079.

Gauri, Varun, and Ayesha Vawda. "Vouchers for Basic Education in Developing Economies: An Accountability Perspective." The World Bank Research Observer​    ​ 19, no. 2 (2004): 259-80. Accessed October 27, 2020. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3986560.

Khan, Salman. “Khan Academy’s Sal Khan shares advice for online learning: Do less, and turn off the camera.” By Heather Kelly. The Washington Post,​    ​ August 31, 2020.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2020/08/31/khan-academy-remote-learning/.

Khattab, Lana. School for Stability: Examining the role of education in fostering social stability​   in Lebanon. ​International Alert, 2017.

https://www.international-alert.org/publications/school-for-stability.

Murnane, Richard J., Marcus R. Waldman, John B. Willett, Maria Soledad Bos, Emiliana Vegas. “The Consequences of Educational Voucher Reform in Chile.” NBER. National Bureau of Economic Research, June 2017.

https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w23550/w23550.pdf.

“New ICT laws and attention to innovation increase Colombia's internet coverage.” Oxford Business Group. Oxford Business Group, 2019. Accessed December 11, 2020.

https://oxfordbusinessgroup.com/overview/public-and-private-sector-initiatives-have-see n-positive-results-increasing-internet-coverage-and.

Newman, Constance Berry. Equipping Africa’s Primary School Learners for the Future​    ​. Report. Atlantic Council, 2017. 18-22. Accessed October 27, 2020.

http://www.jstor.org/stable/resrep16765.9.

“Norway.” UNData. United Nations, Published 2020. Accessed December 9, 2020.

http://data.un.org/en/iso/no.html.

“Sweden.” UNData. United Nations, Published 2020. Accessed December 9, 2020.

http://data.un.org/en/iso/se.html.

Taylor, Luke. “How Colombia’s armed groups are exploiting COVID-19 to recruit children.” The New Humanitarian. The New Humanitarian, September 10, 2020. https://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/news-feature/2020/09/10/Colombia-conflict-armedgroups-child-recruitment.

by Rachel Hsu

On October 24, Colombia surpassed 1 million coronavirus cases, making it the eighth country to reach this tragic milestone.[i] One month later, on November 24, the peace agreement which ended the 52-year conflict between the Marxist FARC guerilla group and the Colombian government celebrated its fourth anniversary. While Covid-19 has devastated nations around the world in unparalleled ways, Colombia’s situation is unique: the pandemic hit the country at a crucial inflection point in its history, a moment in which the success of the peace deal was being determined. While peace was already under considerable strain, Covid-19 has presented new and greater challenges to the process. In particular, the threat the pandemic poses to the social and economic reintegration of ex-combatants—the foundation of the peace deal—may prove the final nail in the agreement’s coffin, flinging the country back into conflict at a time in which peace is so desperately needed. Ex-combatants find themselves on the losing side of an increasingly asymmetrical bargain, and facing uncertainty about their economic futures and fundamental safety, the million-dollar question is this: at what point will the challenges to the peace deal outweigh their commitment to reintegration? The answer, although far from clear, will determine the near future of Colombia. Consequently, reintegration is the most important issue facing the country.  

A Brief History of the Colombian Conflict  

Since the inception of the Republic in 1886,[ii] Colombia has been embroiled in internal conflict for more than 60 years, experiencing only eleven years of peace since the 1950s. The first group of civil wars—four total between 1885-1957—were fought between the Liberal and Conservative parties. Most notable among these were the Thousand Day War (1899-1902), which claimed over 100,000 lives, and La Violencia (1948-1957), which killed more than 200,000.[iii] As in every country, the factors of history affect politics today—and the structural causes and effects of La Violencia prove vital to understanding the more recent conflict. First among these is the weakness of the early Colombian state, which failed to construct a law enforcement presence in much of the country. Harvey Kline frames this as a deliberate tradeoff: tax-averse governing elites feared military or police takeover of government, as had occurred elsewhere in Latin America, and instead substituted private forces for public ones.4 This in part reflected the concentrated power of the private landowners who made and enforced laws on their property in place of the state, a pattern whose roots lie in the colonial era. Spanish colonizers decided that the agricultural and mineral resources of South America were most efficiently exploited through large plantations or mines, creating an extremely unequal distribution of land and power—inequality which persisted through institutions long after independence.[iv] Throughout the formation of the Republic, the interests of regional economic elites trumped political centralization, which was further complicated by Colombia’s geographic barriers. The dual results of this tradeoff—state weakness and land inequality—fed the later conflict in

Colombia. Former President Alfonso Lopez went so far as to state that “unlike other Latin American countries, violence did not originate from the government but from the lack of government.”[v] Colombia, a state which “geographically defies unification,”[vi] became a nation of regions in which the control of the central government seldom extended far outside Bogota and never even approached Weber’s classification of sovereignty as a monopoly over the use of force within a territory. Another pattern made clear by La Violencia was the norm of war as a continuation of politics by other means. Much of this was at the behest of the landowning elites, who enlisted poor campesinos[vii] to fight their political battles—meaning the majority of the population participated in politics through armed conflict before they even gained suffrage.9 La Violencia ended in a political settlement known as the National Front, in which the Liberal and Conservative parties agreed to share power at regular intervals. 

The conditions in Colombia after 1957 created a perfect storm which led to the 19642016 conflict: extreme land inequality left the campesino population deeply aggrieved, and a political system limited to two parties provided no route for peaceful political expression of these grievances, so Marxist guerilla groups formed to address these grievances through other means, espousing pre-existing norms of political violence. The first group to emerge was the Ejército de Liberación National (ELN) in 1964, followed by the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de

Colombia (FARC) in 1966, the Ejército Popular de Liberación (EPL) in 1967, and the 19th of April Movement (M-19) in 1970.[viii] Because the historically weak state lacked the capacity to fight the guerillas, it once again encouraged the creation of private forces, this time to defend against the communist rebels—leading to the formation of paramilitary groups which would go on to exacerbate the conflict. These paramilitary groups were given legal status under Decree 3398 in 1965 and Law 48 in 1968 and initially cooperated closely with the army, though the government stopped supporting them in the 1980s when it became clear paramilitaries were killing civilians and taking money from drug traffickers.[ix] Paramilitaries eventually coalesced into the Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia (AUC) in 1997.[x] A final actor in the conflict was the drug cartels, who funded both sides with profits obtained mainly from cocaine trafficking to the US. Coca became a popular crop for many poor farmers because profitable amounts could be grown on very small plots of land and transported in backpacks, making up for the conditions of land inequality and state absence in rural areas (which equated to a lack of roads and markets). To say that the Colombian conflict was devastating would be an understatement: it raged for 52 years, cost the country an estimated $151 billion, claimed the lives of over 260,000 people, and displaced more than 7 million others.[xi] By the time it ended with the 2016 peace deal, the conflict was the longest in Latin American history, leaving Colombia with the second most internally displaced persons in the world after Syria. 

Between 1964-2016, numerous attempts at peace failed to end the conflict between the government and FARC, the largest of the guerilla groups. One of these in particular, pursued by president Belisario Betancur in 1984, is notable due to the cause of its failure.[xii] The Agreement of La Uribe in 1984 allowed FARC to found a political party called the Unión Patriótica (UP). In the following years, an estimated 3,000 members[xiii] of the UP were killed—contributing to the failure agreement and fueling FARC’s justification of its continued insurgency. Another important peace agreement was reached in 2003 between the government under President Álvaro Uribe Vélez and the AUC. By 2006, 30,671 members of the AUC had collectively demobilized.[xiv] However, many dissident paramilitaries refused to enter (or later abandoned) the peace process, leading to the formation of “neo-paramilitaries” which the government calls bandas criminales, or BACRIM.17 The flawed disbandment of the AUC is not the only notable achievement of the Uribe administration. During Uribe’s 2002-2010 presidency, the number of soldiers and police increased from 291,316 to 431,900, and an armed push against FARC reduced their ranks from 24,000 to 8,000.[xv] By the time President Juan Manuel Santos began the negotiations that would ultimately lead to the 2016 peace deal, the military balance of power had shifted, leaving both the Colombian army and FARC pessimistic of their chances of victory. The Santos peace negotiations proceeded between 2012-2016, and an agreement was announced on August 24, 2016.[xvi] Following modifications, the Colombian congress approved the peace deal in November, and the armed conflict with FARC came to a formal end.20     

Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration 

Central to the 2016 peace agreement is the process of disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration, often abbreviated to DDR. DDR has reached near-orthodoxy status since the 1990s, adopted by the UN as the central dogma of peacebuilding—there have been a whopping total of 60 DDR initiatives in the world since 1989, including the one in Colombia.[xvii] So what exactly is DDR? The first step is disarmament, wherein combatants lay down their arms. [xviii] Crucially, the action of disarmament establishes a social contract between the government and the individual peace signatories, wherein “combatants surrender the security and economic surety their weapons provide, in exchange for opportunities and assistance in finding new livelihoods.”[xix] Next comes demobilization, which involves the dissolution of armed groups. These first two steps are programmatic, military-focused procedures that occur shortly after the end of conflict. The final stage, and the focus of this paper, is much broader: reintegration, which the Cartagena Contribution to DDR defines as “the process by which ex-combatants acquire civilian status and gain sustainable employment and income,” clarifying that “reintegration is essentially a social and economic process with an open time-frame, primarily taking place in communities at the local level.”[xx] 

As simple as it is to reduce DDR to three letters representing three clearly defined processes, the reality is much more complex—in fact, DDR has evolved significantly over its relatively short history. Becoming intimately connected to wider peacebuilding programs, the goal of DDR has shifted from the narrow dissolution of armed groups to a broader conception which seeks to lay the groundwork for sustainable peace. It has become a dynamic political enterprise, “a complex bargaining process connected fundamentally to local conditions on the ground.”[xxi] The UN establishes that whether DDR succeeds depends on “the political will of the parties to commit themselves to peace.”[xxii] Knight (2008) clarifies that the success of the DDR process is rather determined by the continued maintenance of that political will.[xxiii]

Disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration has “repeatedly proved to be vital”[xxiv] to the creation of sustainable peace. But not all parts of DDR weigh equally: rather, the expansion of DDR’s scope has taken place primarily in the reintegration stage, which by definition encompasses broader social and economic goals. The United Nations Integrated DDR Standards maintain that “the sustainable social and economic reintegration of former combatants should be the ultimate objective of [DDR]. If reintegration fails, the achievements of the disarmament and demobilization phase are undermined, instability increases, and sustainable reconstruction and development are put at risk.”[xxv] Therefore, given that the achievement of long term peace is contingent on the success of DDR, and the success of DDR is contingent on the success of reintegration, it logically follows that reintegration is the process upon which the entire fate of peace hinges. 

The Colombian Peace Deal and DDR 

The Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict and Build a Stable and Lasting Peace was ratified on November 29, 2016. The agreement consists of six parts: comprehensive rural reform; political participation; end of the conflict; solution to the problem of illicit drugs; victims; and implementation and verification. The breadth of its content recognizes the structural causes of conflict and attempts to redress them, extending the peace deal far beyond a simple end to fighting. This paper focuses on the challenges facing guarantees included in Chapter 3 of the peace deal, which includes DDR. Acknowledging the importance of reintegration, the agreement states that “laying the bases for building a stable and long-lasting peace requires effective reincorporation30 of the FARC into the social, economic, and political life of the country”[xxvi]

The “economic and social reincorporation” process initiated by the 2016 peace deal is remarkably ambitious. Following the ratification of the peace accord, ex-combatants relocated to designated spaces for reintegration. These have evolved through different acronyms over the course of the peace process, but are today known as Former Territorial Spaces for Reintegration and Normalization (AECTRs). Here, ex-combatants underwent a six month demobilization and disarmament process, turning over their arms to the UN Verification Mission in Colombia. A total of 13,202 ex-FARC were accredited as demobilized.[xxvii] Next came reintegration, throughout which ex-combatants receive a monthly allowance of 90% of the legal minimum monthly wage. Total disbursements of economic benefits between August 2018-June 2020 amounted to $316,278 million.[xxviii] Now that early stages of reintegration have finished, former FARC members have full citizenship and are free to the AECTRs.34 However, some have elected to stay: as of October 2020, 2,619 people remained in the AECTRs, while 9,582 had left.[xxix] 

The long term reintegration process is laid out in the “reincorporation route,” which contains seven broad components: educational, economic sustainability, habitability and housing, healthcare, psychosocial wellbeing, family, and community. Programs included in the educational and economic sustainability components are especially important. As of March 2020, 5,224 ex-combatants were enrolled in primary to high school-level education programs and an additional 1,768 had participated in vocational training.[xxx] Ex-combatants are eligible for a one-off grant of COP 8,000,000 to fund individual productive projects, of which there have been 1,718 so far. 4,987 former combatants have benefitted from productive projects.[xxxi]  

Notably, section 3.4 of the peace agreement also contains security guarantees including “the fight against criminal organisations responsible for homicides and massacres or who attack human rights advocates, social movements or political movements” or who challenge the implementation of peace.[xxxii] This guarantee reflects a “modern, qualitatively new concept of security” which emphasizes the “defence of democratic values, in particular the protection of the rights and freedoms of those engaged in politics.”39 Recognizing the “extraordinary risk” FARC peace signatories faced, the Final Agreement also includes lengthy guarantees for the security of reincorporating ex-combatants in and promises the dismantling of the “paramilitary phenomenon” in a “National Political Pact” to ensure arms ceased to be used in politics. One of the guiding principles of Chapter 3 is “to safeguard the legitimate monopoly of force and of the use of arms by the state across the country’s territories”[xxxiii]—a statement that broke from Colombian government’s past tendency to delegate policing to private forces. What in other countries might be a recognition of simple Weberian sovereignty was in Colombia a declaration of bold, historically unprecedented intent.

The exceptionally broad scope of the peace deal is also worth discussing. The 300-page Final Agreement reads less like a cessation of conflict and more like a broad mandate for structural economic reform and development, achieving social equity, strengthening democracy, and expanding state presence. This largely reflects the agreement’s explicit recognition of “the historical causes of the conflict, such as the unresolved issue of land ownership and, in particular, the concentration thereof, the exclusion of the rural population, and the underdevelopment of rural communities.”[xxxiv] Upon FARC’s insistence, the peace agreement acknowledged the role of state weakness, land inequality, and norms of political violence—and it promised to resolve all three. It also employs novel territory-based, gender-based, and ethnic-based approaches. Chapter 1, Comprehensive Rural Reform, aims to reverse the conditions that facilitated violence by establishing a structural and in-depth transformation of rural Colombia. The central mechanisms of this reform are the Development Programs with a Territorial Approach (PDETs).[xxxv] The goal: eradication of hunger and poverty, closing the gap between urban and rural areas, the democratization of property and greater land equality, and guaranteed non-recurrence of violence which stemmed from any of the previous grievances. Chapter 5 outlines a solution to the problem of illicit drugs, which fueled the conflict.[xxxvi] Recognizing causal factors of poverty and marginalization, the government created the Program for the Substitution of Illegal Crops (PNIS).[xxxvii] And finally, the peace agreement hints at the central condition which begat violence: state weakness. “Appreciating and extolling the fact that the central pillar of peace is the promotion of the presence and the effective operation of the state throughout the country, especially throughout the many regions that are today afflicted by neglect, by the lack of an effective civil service and by the effects of the internal armed conflict itself,” the agreement states, “it is an essential goal of national reconciliation to construct a new territorial-based welfare and development paradigm to the benefit of broad sectors of the population that have hitherto been the victims of exclusion and despair.”[xxxviii]

Yet while the agreement’s success at its ultimate goal of dismantling the structural conditions of violence in Colombia will broadly determine the sustainability of peace, it is reintegration which will decide if and when armed conflict between former FARC members and the government recurs. Each of the other aspects of the peace deal—comprehensive rural reform, solution to the problem of illicit drugs, political participation—would only cause a relapse into conflict if ex-combatants believed that these efforts had failed so significantly that they decided to remobilize. For example, a failure of rural reform would only cause the peace deal to collapse if it led to a failure of reintegration. Importantly, lapses in other areas of the peace agreement could contribute to reintegration failure by adding to a sense of government let-down, increasing the inertia of grievances which might eventually out-weigh ex-combatants’ commitment to reincorporation processes. But if reintegration itself fails, this self-evidently means conflict has returned in some form. Thus the social and economic reintegration of ex-combatants is both the foundation of peace and the precise mechanism of its potential failure. 

Challenges to Reintegration 

Recall that the success of DDR is contingent on the maintenance of political will from both sides. Disarmament creates a social contract wherein combatants agree to give up their weapons in returns for guarantees of security and economic opportunity, which those weapons had once

offered. If either side goes back on its end of the deal—if combatants decide their safety and economic livelihoods are better served by taking up arms again, or if the government ceases to offer security or economic support—then DDR fails. Critically, while the social contract is established by disarmament, its guarantees are carried out during the reintegration phase. Challenges to reintegration should be viewed through this framework: are ex-combatants better off participating in peace than going to war? Do the benefits of reintegration exceed the value of a weapon? Will the government hold up its end of the deal? And at what point will the costs of peace outweigh ex-combatant commitment to reintegration? Right now, most ex-combatants— 12,940 as of March 2020—remain committed to reintegration.[xxxix] However, they are increasingly questioning the security guarantees and economic options provided.

The Covid-19 pandemic has not created many entirely novel challenges—rather, it has exacerbated pre-existing issues. The pandemic has had four main effects on Colombia. First, it has lessened state presence in rural areas as the government has withdrawn to focus on battling the virus. Second, the pandemic has ravaged the Colombian economy, leading to skyrocketing unemployment and greater inequality, particularly in the countryside. Third, it has shifted the locus of government attention towards lockdown measures and economic fallout and away from the peace deal. Finally, the pandemic has closed down schools across a country which lacks sufficient Internet infrastructure. These four effects have all worsened existing obstacles to the Final Agreement, raising the costs of peace for ex-combatants and contributing to a sense that the government is not fulfilling its side of the contract. 

Government Will and Capacity 

The government’s political will has weakened under the administration of president Ivan Duque, a political protégé of Alvaro Uribe and member of his Democratic Center Party. Duque’s 2018 presidential election campaign promised to “modify” the peace agreement, feeding on public sentiments that the deal was too lenient on the guerillas. Once in office, his administration slashed funding for transitional justice measures and broke from the crop substitution approach in the Final Agreement. A Gallup poll noted 57% of Colombians believed the administration would not fulfill the promises of the Final Agreement.[xl] Duque’s policies and rhetoric have increased uncertainty among ex-combatants about the strength of the government’s commitment to the peace process. As one article put it, “The transition from a government that had signed the peace agreement and started implementation, to one that openly questioned the peace process, generated discord among the ranks of the former combatants.”[xli]  

            Implementation of the peace deal has been slow. The University of Notre Dame’s Kroc Institute found that only 35% of the 578 commitments in the peace agreement have reached “advanced levels” of implementation, while 34% are in a state of “minimal” implementation and 31% have yet to be started at all.[xlii] DDR processes faced early challenges and delays. By March 2017, none of the reintegration zones had been fully built—leaving demobilized combatants, some with children, living under plastic sheets. Other areas of the peace deal have suffered slow implementation as well. Though nearly 100,000 families signed up for the crop substitution program, 41,910 have yet to receive any payment.[xliii] One report found that at the current rate of implementation, it will take forty years to finish establishing PDETs—the primary mechanism of rural development and establishment of state presence in the countryside. Thus, both government will and capacity have proven tenuous at best throughout the last few years of the peace process.  

The most important effect of the transition in political rhetoric under the Duque administration and the slow pace of implementation has been to undermine ex-combatants’ confidence that the government will hold up its end of the deal. Now, with the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, the government’s priorities have shifted even further. The peace deal is a massive undertaking, and its programs are expensive. During a time of intense economic strain, when politics feels more like fighting a fire than building the future, implementation of the peace agreement is no longer the first item on the agenda. The Duque administration recently released a five year-long plan for Covid recovery that would cost upwards of $46.8 billion—13% of the country’s GDP.[xliv] If the government was unable to even begin one third of the peace deal’s provisions in four normal years, with less political will and more pressing matters to attend to, implementation will undoubtedly slow even further. Given that the success of DDR depends on the maintenance of political will on both sides, the government’s decided lack of will—and inability to hold up its side of the agreement—present a major challenge to reintegration. 

Security 

To every action there is an equal and opposite reaction: every peace deal mobilizes forces to oppose it. Stedman (1997) describes these so-called ‘spoilers’ as “leaders and parties who believe that peace emerging from negotiations threatens their power, worldview, and interests, and use violence to undermine attempts to achieve it.”[xlv] Peace negotiations involve compromise since they occur by definition because neither side was able to achieve their war aims. Actors who were excluded, stand to lose from peace, or feel their values have been betrayed by the settlement might mobilize against the peace process, undermining stability and threatening the security of peace signatories. Demobilized ex-combatants thus face a security dilemma. Their lives are threatened by spoiler groups, creating incentives for re-armament. Yet this would violate the terms of any DDR-based peace agreement, so ex-combatants must rely on the state— their former nemesis—for protection. State-ensured security therefore forms a crucial piece of the central pact of DDR. 

In Colombia, a handful of different groups act as violent spoilers—one 2018 report counted 7,265 persisting members of illegal armed groups.[xlvi] The peace agreement created a power vacuum in many territories formerly held by FARC under the assumption that government forces would step in. Instead, armed groups often took control, battling each other in bloody turf wars that contributed to continuing violence and terror in the countryside. Following the further withdrawal of government presence during the pandemic, these armed groups have only grown in power. There are three main categories of violent spoilers challenging the reintegration process in Colombia: paramilitary groups, remaining guerilla groups, and FARC dissident groups. 

When the Final Agreement was signed in November 2016, an estimated 800 FARC fighters rejected the peace process wholesale and refused to demobilize. These constituted the first of the FARC “dissidents,” members of the guerilla group that either eschewed peace from the start or abandoned it later. Hundreds more would follow, though exact numbers are hard to pin down. A report published in El Tiempo in December 2019 counted 1,749 total FARC dissidents spread across 19 departments,[xlvii] while other sources place this number closer to 3,000.[xlviii] Today, an estimated 23 different dissident groups operate throughout Colombia.[xlix]

Another cluster of spoiler groups are the so-called bandes criminales, or BACRIM, that emerged out of the flawed demobilization and reintegration processes of the peace agreement with the AUC in 2006. The largest of these groups is the Gaitanist Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (ACG), also known as the Urabeños or the Clan de Golfo. Emerging after AUC commander Vicente Castaño abandoned the demobilization process in 2006, the ACG has somewhere between 1,500-2,000 members.[l] Los Puntilleros are another sizable paramilitary group which formed out of the rubble of the AUC, though membership is below 1,000.[li]

Third are the remaining other guerilla forces: the ELN, the last original member of the Colombian conflict still standing, and Los Pelusos, a dissident faction of the EPL that rejected the EPL’s 1991 peace agreement with the government. Though the ELN shares its Marxist roots with FARC, the two groups fought each other throughout the conflict. Today, the ELN is one of the largest illegal armed groups still operating in Colombia, with membership likely between 2,000-2,500.[lii] FARC’s demobilization presented an opportunity for the ELN to expand into former-FARC territory, allowing the group to take over trafficking roots in new areas. The group has also expanded across the Venezuelan border. The ELN is in conflict with both the ACG and Los Pelusos, and has variant relationships with different FARC dissident factions. 

The above groups reveal a pattern in Colombian history. After decades of violence, the government and an armed group strike a peace bargain that ends with formal demobilization and reintegration of ex-combatants. But this DDR process partly fails, and a significant portion of former fighters either refuse to participate in the peace process in the first place or abandon it later, reforming into smaller and more diffuse criminal groups. This happened after the AUC demobilized in 2006 when dissident factions formed the ACG and other BACRIM, and after the

EPL demobilized in 1991 and dissidents formed Los Pelusos.[liii] In 2014, an estimated 24% of Colombia’s demobilized ex-combatants had reverted to criminal activity.[liv] These groups contribute to continued violence and insecurity, becoming spoilers to future peace agreements. The same pattern is repeating with FARC, wherein dissident groups are abandoning the peace process, in turn lessening the security of remaining demobilized ex-combatants, prompting them to re-arm in a vicious cycle which degrades peace.  

The greatest challenge to reintegration comes from these violent spoiler groups and the resulting lack of security ex-combatants suffer. Since the signing of the peace deal, a total of 247 ex-FARC combatants—nearly one in every fifty—have been killed.[lv] 44 family members of ex-combatants have been murdered too.[lvi] Even AECTRs themselves have proven unsafe. In the area around the “Román Ruiz'' reincorporation space in Antioquia, twelve peace signatories have been killed, likely at the hands of the ACG and the 18th Front FARC dissident group. Near another, nine ex-FARC have died. One peace signatory, Alexánder Parra, was murdered inside an AECTR in Meta.[lvii] The main culprits: the ACG, FARC dissident groups, and the ELN. And ex-combatants are not the only actors in the peace deal being targeted—the NGO Indepaz estimates that more than 1,000 human rights activists and community leaders have been killed since late 2016.[lviii] Of these, more than 50% were involved in the peace process in some way.   The pandemic has decreased security in rural reincorporation zones further. While the state focused on responses to the virus, armed groups “sought to profit from the sudden change in conditions, the refocusing of state priorities and distracted security forces,” consolidating control over their territories and in some cases acting as the sole governing authority.[lix] The UN reported in June that “In various regions, illegal armed groups and criminal organizations have taken advantage of the pandemic to strengthen their presence in the territories, including through attacks against public security forces, forced displacement and confinement of communities, and threats and targeted killings of social leaders and former FARC-EP members.”[lx] In an extraordinary demonstration of the government’s lack of complete territorial control, a number of illegal armed groups have taken it upon themselves to impose Covid-related social restrictions. In northern Colombia, the ACG sent WhatsApp messages and circulated pamphlets to residents advising them to stay inside—and threatening to kill them if they disobeyed the lockdown—a strategy mirrored by one dissident FARC group. In areas along the coast, the ELN imposed a number of restrictions, including curfews, road closures, and a ban on large events.[lxi] Human Rights Watch identified similar efforts in 11 departments. Consequently, violence against ex-combatants and social leaders is on the rise. One study found that “in recent months, there has been an alarming increase in the killings of social leaders and members of vulnerable groups, relative to pre-pandemic months (January-March 2020) as well as in comparison to the same period last year (April-August 2019).”[lxii] For many, Covid-19 has decreased the security of their health. For ex-combatants, it has done so twofold—they risk both the virus and politically motivated murder. 

Could killings of ex-combatants motivate FARC members to abandon the peace process? History yields a clear answer—yes. The violent fate of the Unión Patriótica, and subsequent abandonment of peace processes and resurgence of conflict, prove an ominous precedent for the modern day. Then, deaths of thousands of UP representatives led FARC to abandon the Agreement of La Uribe and continue its insurgency. There is no clear reason why history might not repeat itself today. In fact, Ivan Marquez, one of the FARC dissident leaders, was once a political representative of the UP. The government’s previous failure to provide security is clearly fresh on the minds of many ex-combatants—and has proven sufficient cause to abandon peace in the past. 

In the words of the UN Verification Mission in Colombia, “the unrelenting violence against former combatants continues to take a toll on the reintegration process and the consolidation of peace more broadly.”[lxiii] The hundreds of killings of ex-FARC combatants violate both the literal text of the peace agreement and the fundamental compact of DDR. Guarantees of security for both ex-combatants and social activists are emphasized in the peace deal, to which the concept of security (especially related to the practice of political opposition) is central. When combatants' lives are less secure at peace than they were at war, this inevitably leads some to question whether remaining committed to peace is worthwhile. Continuing murders have driven a sense of government betrayal on its side of the deal—which is to insure the lives and livelihoods of ex-combatants once they turned in their weapons. Sergio Jaramillo, the former High Commissioner for Peace, highlights the central problem created by the lack of security: “Some people may begin, at risk, to hesitate and prefer to get under the umbrella of some illegal organization to protect themselves from murder.”[lxiv] If this occurs—if ex-combatants feel that taking up arms would protect them better than remaining in reintegration programs— then reincorporation fails and conflict worsens. 

Economic Opportunity 

Economic opportunity is another core pillar of the contract created by DDR. In exchange for handing over their guns, the source of livelihood and security for ex-combatants, the government ensures access to the above-ground economy and works to support the economic livelihoods of ex-combatants. This is a challenge in any country. Negative stigmatization of ex-combatants creates barriers to employment, as many businesses are unwilling to hire a former guerilla. Excombatants also tend to lack significant education, since many joined FARC at a young age or came from rural areas where education infrastructure is lacking. They do become skilled in one area which is in constant demand by other armed groups and cartels: violence. Together, these baseline problems make finding legal employment particularly difficult (and illegal employment particularly easy) for ex-combatants—yet gaining a sustainable source of income is vital to the economic half of “social and economic reintegration.” 

Colombia’s economic turmoil has only added to this challenge. In one scenario mirroring the effect of Covid-19, economists at the University of Los Andes found that poverty could rise 15 percentage points relative to 2019, while inequality might rise to 0.574 on the Gini index—a setback of two decades.[lxv] Unemployment has skyrocketed, reaching a record high of 21.4% in May[lxvi] and now standing at 15.8%, 5.6% higher than the same month last year.[lxvii] Facing this unfriendly labor market, ex-combatants are even less likely to find work than before. The impact of this may not be felt immediately, since ex-combatants still receive a monthly allowance under the long-term reincorporation stage. Yet this is neither sustainable nor sufficient, as it amounts to a measly 90% of Colombia’s minimum wage—just over USD $200 per month. The peace agreement is structured so that ex-combatants can employ themselves in productive projects, which somewhat insulate them from the wider economic collapse. Over a third of ex-combatants have become involved in productive projects, making them integral to sustainable economic reintegration. But these too have come under new strain during the pandemic: the UN found that “half of the productive initiatives have been affected by the pandemic.”[lxviii] 

Education programs form another component of economic reintegration, aiming to equip ex-combatants with new skills apart from violence that can be used to gain sustainable employment. But in response to the Covid-19 lockdowns, schools across Colombia have closed. The UN reported in June that a number of educational programs included in the peace agreement have been placed on hold in light of the pandemic.[lxix] Internet infrastructure is also largely absent in many rural regions, a problem which disproportionately affects the educational outcomes of ex-combatants, since the great majority live in the countryside. 

 Given the rising challenges to sustainable economic reincorporation, ex-combatants may be tempted to abandon the reincorporation process and capitalize on their most lucrative skill set: conflict. Armed groups can reportedly offer four times more than what combatants make from the monthly stipend, drawing on funds gained from illicit activities like cocaine trafficking and illegal mining. The crop substitution program’s failings and the lack of state presence in rural areas have only enhanced the control and financing of armed groups. In recent months, the Covid-19 pandemic has also created new opportunities for recruitment, as rural families have been left with no source of income and children’s schools have closed down.[lxx] These factors result in the strengthening of armed groups and the lessening of economic benefits of reincorporation. Combined with the lack of security ex-combatants face, taking up a gun is increasingly seeming like a more profitable choice than remaining in reincorporation programs. 

A One-Sided Deal 

The convergence of the Duque administrations reticence to support the peace process, delays in implementation of crucial programs, the killings of ex-combatants, and decreased economic opportunity have contributed to a sense that the government is letting down its side of the contract established by DDR. In exchange for giving up their weapons, ex-combatants are supposed to receive from the government a replacement of the security and economic guarantees those weapons once provided. Yet in the minds of ex-combatants, these promises have proven empty. Scores of ex-FARC and peace activists have been murdered despite numerous provisions in the Final Agreement for their protection. Economic support has proven weak at best, while armed groups offer better salaries and greater security. The Covid-19 pandemic has exacerbated each of these problems, strengthening the violent spoiler groups that pose the greatest threat to peace while undermining programs for education and sustainable economic reintegration. So far, the vast majority of ex-combatants remain committed to the reintegration process. But unrest is growing. In October, thousands of ex-combatants marched from reintegration spaces across Colombia to Bogota in a “Pilgrimage for Life and Peace,” to protest the killings of demobilized FARC fighters since the 2016 peace deal. The pilgrimage movement rejected the “systematic murder of peace signatories” and “demands guarantees for [ex-FARC] lives.”[lxxi] For now, ex-combatants are turning to peaceful protest to air their grievances and seek greater security. Whether the government can follow through on its guarantees remains to be seen. Recent statements from the FARC political party’s Twitter account underscore this sense of a skewed bargain: 

4 years after #AcuerdoDePaz we can tell you that we remain steadfast with peace, committed and committed to exhaustion with the implementation despite the failures of the Colombian state[lxxii] 

Four years after signing the final peace agreement, an agreement marked by noncompliance by the government and the deaths of 242 ex-combatants who signed the peace, we continue to reaffirm our fight for peace with social justice for NEW COLOMBIA[lxxiii]

#GraciasAlAcuerdo thousands of us and we have returned to our families, however, today we have 242 free companions, whose lives were taken away by those who oppose peace, this happens when the Government applies a complicit indifference and stigmatizes us[lxxiv] 

The gov @IvanDuque must comply with and advance the implementation of the agreements made with communities. To pilgrims #PorLaVidaPorLaPaz it must materialize access to land for productive projects and especially protect their lives. For now they keep killing our companions[lxxv]

We regret to report that yesterday two peace signatories and a family member were assassinated… Stop this killing! @IvanDuque[lxxvi]

May peace not cost us our lives![lxxvii] 

These statements from FARC reveal two clear patterns: growing discontent over the perception of government failures, and a continuing commitment to the peace agreement in spite of this. Excombatants are upholding their side of the deal. But they increasingly feel that the government (particularly Ivan Duque) is not upholding theirs, shifting the costs of peace onto the shoulders of the vulnerable ex-combatant population. This has only accelerated during the pandemic. For now, peace is holding—but if insecurity continues to worsen, and economic opportunities dim further, the challenges to reintegration and the sense of government betrayal may trump excombatants commitment to the peace process. The critical process of reintegration would fail. 

Possible Outcomes 

There are three main paths down which Colombia may go: a reconstitution of the FARC and resumption of formal conflict with the government; the amplification of low-level violence by a growing number of smaller armed groups; and in the event the peace deal succeeds, lessening violence. Of these, the second is seeming increasingly likely. 

Should ex-combatants become so disenchanted with the government’s failings that they collectively abandon collective reincorporation, all the way to the highest ranks of the party, FARC could reform as a formal group and resume conflict with the government. This would be extraordinarily devastating, considering the first conflict cost the lives of a quarter million people and lasted for half a century. But because a collective remobilization of FARC would necessarily involve stimulation by leadership, and leadership has grown seemingly comfortable with peaceful mechanisms of politics, this path seems improbable. 

More likely, facing increasing insecurity and decreasing economic opportunity, excombatants will slowly trickle out of reincorporation processes and join or form illegal armed groups, whether those are traffickers, FARC dissidents, or the ELN. Those who remain within the reincorporation process will be killed at higher rates, feeding a vicious cycle which will hasten the unraveling of reintegration. Eventually, if a majority of ex-combatants abandon reintegration—the core of the peace deal—the agreement will collapse, particularly if Duque’s administration uses ex-combatants’ return to violence as justification to abandon other peace programs. The structural conditions which caused violence in the past will persist.  

Somewhat counterintuitively, the second option might actually be worse than a formal reconstitution of FARC. If ex-combatants slowly drain out of reintegration programs, the result will be similar to what happened to the AUC: a once-unified group with strong command and control structures will rupture into fragmented and diffuse factions. These groups are no longer motivated by ideology or moral purpose, because they alone will never be able to defeat the state. Rather, their raison d’etre is self enrichment. They exist solely to leech the resources of rural territories, much as dissident factions and BACRIM compete for access to trafficking routes and illegal mining in the spaces FARC left as part of the peace deal. This can already be seen in the diversity of FARC dissident groups. Such an outcome would be uniquely deleterious, since similarly large amounts of death and displacement would occur but with no motive except exploitation, no central or cooperated strategy except destruction, and limited hope for peace. With FARC, the government could reach a negotiated settlement by making concessions to the ideological motives of the guerillas—a settlement that was only reached once both sides concluded they could not win. But with smaller groups, the government can hope to win. Furthermore, these organizations exist to enrich themselves on the spoils of conflict and plunder, meaning they likely bear little desire for disarmament and demobilization. Low level conflict will persist indefinitely, extracting a heavy toll. Trapped in a gray zone between formal war and genuine peace, the people of Colombia will suffer yet more underserved tragedy.  

Finally, against all odds, ex-combatants may remain committed to reintegration. Four years after the signing of the peace deal, and in spite of numerous challenges which started early in the implementation process, the majority of ex-combatants today stand in favor of the peace process. Perhaps the government will pick up the pace of implementation, find ways to protect ex-combatants, and better support productive projects for ex-combatants. It goes without saying that this outcome would be the best by far. So what actions could be taken to secure the future of reincorporation?  

Possible Solutions 

The best solution is simply to follow through on the commitments of the peace agreement. The Final Agreement provides a roadmap for spurring economic development; bringing rural areas and the marginalized populations who inhabit them under state control; dismantling norms of political violence; and peacefully and sustainably reincorporating ex-FARC combatants into the economy and society. Were the government to fully and quickly implement the entirety of the programs stipulated in the agreement, peace would probably be achieved and many Colombian citizens would see their lives improved. But given the progress of implementation so far, and the additional challenges posed by Covid-19, this seems unlikely. In light of this, there are two main approaches the central government could adopt in the short run which would decrease the likelihood of reintegration failing. 

The first is to prioritize security guarantees contained in the peace agreement. Uncertainty over the very security of their lives is driving ex-combatants’ feeling that the government is not holding up their side of the deal more than any other issue, fueling a strong sense of abandonment. Consequently, stopping the murders of ex-combatants and peace activists is the absolute most important step. Any approach must involve protection of ex-combatants themselves, but also concerted efforts to stamp out the spoiler groups responsible for the murders. The government should continue peace negotiations with the ELN—one group responsible for murdering ex-combatants—hopefully resulting in another DDR-based agreement. As part of a wider campaign to increase state presence in rural areas, it should then seek to reduce the ranks of the various paramilitary and dissident groups. 

Second, ex-combatants need increased access to land for productive projects, which the UN has called “an urgent requirement for the sustainability of the reintegration process,” particularly because the majority of ex-combatants seek to become farmers.[lxxviii] Right now, most of the AECTRs are on rented land. The government has succeeded in purchasing land for one reincorporation space in Tolima, and it should continue these efforts. Purchasing of land for AECTRs could mesh with increased security for these spaces. Some progress has been made: the Duque administration recently released Decree 1543, which creates avenues for ex-combatants who remain committed to reincorporation to gain access to land.[lxxix]  

Unfortunately, even with some miraculous strengthening of political will, in the wake of the pandemic the Colombian government may simply lack the capacity to implement the peace deal. It may (justifiably) prioritize economic recovery over the expensive and laborious process of implementing the Final Agreement. Should this scenario unfold, the burden of peace will continue to fall increasingly to ex-combatants themselves. The success of reintegration may rest upon the strength of a single, unmeasurable variable: willpower. To save peace, ex-combatants might find the only step they can take is to remain steadfastly committed to the Final Agreement regardless of the personal sacrifice this requires. Finally, given the failings of the central government, departments and communities could play a greater role in reintegration going forward, working to provide protection, land, and funding to ex-combatants as they pursue productive projects. Though not ideal, a community-centric approach could provide excombatants with just enough support that peace remains preferable to re-armament.  

Conclusion 

In 2012, Colombia embarked on an ambitious mission to end a half-century long conflict and structurally transform much of the country to address the conditions—land inequality, state weakness, and norms of political violence—that had originally created violence. The resultant 2016 peace agreement contained broad stipulations for rural reform, economic development, state-building, and an expansive DDR program including the social and economic reincorporation of ex-combatants. Four years later, the process faces numerous challenges. Most important among these are obstacles to the reincorporation process, since reincorporation alone determines the fate of peace. If ex-combatants fail to reintegrate, they return to conflict, throwing Colombia into war at a time when peace is desperately needed. Reintegration is best conceived of as a contract between the government and ex-combatants which is initially established by disarmament, wherein ex-combatants turn over their weapons in exchange for government guarantees of economic opportunity and security. The success of this process is determined by the maintenance of political will on both sides; so long as the state remains willing and able to safeguard the livelihoods of ex-combatants, and so long as ex-combatants remain committed to reintegration, DDR succeeds. But if the government lets down its end of the bargain, and excombatants begin to believe a gun might provide greater economic or physical security, incentives to abandon the peace process eventually outweigh their commitment to reintegration. This is the central challenge peace in Colombia faces today. Since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, the power of armed spoilers in rural areas has grown, contributing to continued killings of ex-combatants and peace activists. Facing an economic downturn of massive proportions, ex-combatants' prospects in the above-ground economy are dimming while demand for their specific skill set stays high. A renewed government push for peace is needed, yet the administration of president Ivan Duque openly questions the peace process and has found in the pandemic a reason to put peace on the back-burner. The structural conditions which originally fueled conflict still exist—in fact, the pandemic has only exacerbated inequality and state weakness in rural areas. The most likely outcome is somewhere between war and peace: excombatants will slowly abandon the peace process, contributing to the growth of multitudinous criminal armed groups who will continue to fight for control in the countryside.

Because it threatens the lifeblood of the peace agreement more than any other issue— failure of another aspect of the Final Agreement would only prompt a return to conflict if it caused reincorporation to collapse—reintegration of ex-FARC combatants is the most important issue facing Colombia today. Of all the possible timelines Colombia may go down in the near future, one in which widespread conflict resumes is surely the worst. Its immediate impacts will be the death and abuse and terror inflicted on the same long-suffering communities which have been marginalized for much of Colombia’s history—the rural families and small farmers whose lands are pillaged and whose blood is spilled. But ultimately, every Colombian will suffer. Renewed conflict will upset the working of the economy during a crucial period of recovery, both by disrupting the operation of businesses and by diverting government funds towards fighting armed groups. The thousands of people who will be displaced by increased conflict will flood into a strained labor market already beset by high unemployment rates. State presence in rural areas will falter further, as insecurity begets insecurity and armed groups battle each other for territory and resources. This new conflict—a more fractious, less ideological, greedy war— will be even harder to resolve than its predecessor. Facing dozens of distinct groups with no goal except their own self-enrichment and survival, the government will be hard-set to negotiate another peaceful settlement and too weak to suppress all of these groups militarily. Yet perhaps the importance of reintegration is best demonstrated by the opportunity costs of its failure. If the Final Agreement succeeded, every citizen of Colombia could experience a majority of their life in a condition seldom seen by the Republic: peace. The government could establish a monopoly over force across the entire territory, closing the urban-rural gap by investing in the PDETs and following through on its promise to eliminate the paramilitary phenomenon. By funding cropsubstitution programs established by the peace agreement, the state could finally nip the cocainetrade at its source, making legal farming more profitable than growing coca. Thousands of excombatants could be reintegrated as productive members of society, and their ideology could be peacefully incorporated into the political system. The gender and ethnicity-based approach of the Final Agreement could translate into a more equitable, accepting society. And most importantly, the structural causes which fueled conflict for so many decades—land inequality, political exclusion, state weakness, and norms of political violence—could be resolved. The potential for future violence, the number of grievances which could compel someone to take up a gun, could be greatly reduced. 

Maybe the exceptionally broad scope of the Final Agreement doomed it to fail, at least to some extent. Yet peace will never succeed without a recognition of the structural causes of war and a concerted effort to redress them. Fixing reintegration programs alone is a stop-gap measure, a band-aid to prevent an imminent return to widespread conflict. Any sustainable peace will require much wider implementation of the stipulations of the Final Agreement, each of which faces daunting challenges of its own. But should ex-combatants abandon their commitment to reintegration in the face of threats from violent spoiler groups and dimming economic prospects, conflict will resume immediately, and the Final Agreement is forfeited entirely. This makes reintegration the vital fulcrum upon which Colombia’s future rests—if it succeeds, impetus for peace will cascade forth, and if it fails, the inertia towards war will become unstoppable.   


[i] “Colombia surpasses 1 million COVID-19 cases,” Al Jazeera, October 25, 2020. 

[ii] Clemente Garavito, “Colombia,” Encyclopedia Britannica, December 15, 2020. The political entity that would become the modern Colombian state went through numerous iterations. I refer to the most recent name for clarity, but it is important to note that Colombian history starts long before 1886.  

[iii] James D. Henderson, When Colombia Bled (Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press, 1985), 51.   4Harvey F. Kline, Between the Sword and the Wall (Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press, 2020), 9.

[iv] Kenneth L. Sokoloff and Stanley L. Engerman, "History Lessons: Institutions, Factors Endowments, and Paths of Development in the New World," The Journal of Economic Perspectives 14, no. 3 (2000): 221.  

[v] Kline, 10.  

[vi] Kline, 12.  

[vii] Peasants or farmers in rural areas  9Kline, 11.  

[viii] Kline, 16.  

[ix] Kline, 18.  

[x] “AUC,” Colombia Reports, December 5, 2016. 

[xi] Adriaan Alsema, “Total economic cost of 52 years of war in Colombia $151B: Study,” Colombia Reports, September 26, 2016. 

[xii] Kline, 19.  

[xiii] The exact number of UP members killed is disputed. 

[xiv] Enzo Nussio, “Learning from Shortcomings: The Demobilization of Paramilitaries in Colombia,” Journal of Peacebuilding & Development 6 (2012): 88. Some allege that this number (as published by the Uribe administration) is heavily inflated, so it should be taken with a grain of salt.  17Nussio, 89. 

[xv] Kline, 38.  

[xvi] Sibylla Brodzinsky, “Colombia signs historic peace deal with Farc,” The Guardian, November 24, 2016.  20Nicholas Casey, “Colombia’s Congress Approves Peace Accord with FARC,” The New York Times, November 30, 2016. 

[xvii] Robert Muggah and Chris O’Donnell, “Next Generation Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration,” Stability: International Journal of Security and Development 4 (2015): 2. 

[xviii] “The Cartagena Contribution to Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration” (Cartagena, Colombia, June 2009), 3.  

[xix] M. Knight and A. Ozerdem, “Guns, camps, and cash: disarmament, demobilization and reinsertion of former combatants in transition from war to peace,” Journal of Peace Research 41 (2004): 501.

[xx] “Cartagena Contribution,” 5.

[xxi] Muggah and O’Donnell, 6. 

[xxii] “The Role of the United Nations Peacekeeping in Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration,” Report of the Secretary-General, February 11, 2000, 1. 

[xxiii] Mark Knight, “Expanding the DDR Model: Politics and Organisations,” Journal of Security Sector Management 6 (March 2008), 8.  

[xxiv] “Role of the United Nations Peacekeeping,” 1. 

[xxv] “Integrated Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Standards,” United Nations, August 1, 2006, 422.   30Because Colombia has so many ex-combatants from a multitude of different groups who demobilized at different times, different processes for reintegration exist. In the context of Colombian law, “reintegration” refers to programs for individually demobilized guerillas and ex-paramilitaries; “reincorporation” refers to programs specific to exFARC members who demobilized collectively under the 2016 peace agreement. In this paper, I use the terms reintegration and reincorporation interchangeably to refer to the processes of the 2016 peace deal, a decision I made because DDR literature predominantly uses the word “reintegration.”   

[xxvi] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict and Build a Stable and Lasting Peace,” November 24, 2016, 8.  

[xxvii] Presidential Council for Stabilization and Consolidation,“La implementación de la política de Paz con Legalidad es seria, verificable y reconocida por las comunidades en los territorios y la cooperación internacional, afirma el Consejero Presidencial para la Establización,” February 26, 2020, 2. 

[xxviii] Agency for Reincorporation and Normalization, “ARN in Numbers August 2020,” August 31, 2020, 6.  34Agency for Reincorporation and Normalization, “Reincorporation,” Accessed December 18, 2020. 

[xxix] “ARN in Numbers August 2020,” 6. 

[xxx] United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia, “Report of the Secretary-General,” March 26, 2020, 7.  

[xxxi] Agency for Reincorporation and Normalization, “ARN in Numbers October 2020,” October 31, 2020, 6. 

[xxxii] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 8.   39“Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 79.

[xxxiii] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 80.

[xxxiv] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 3. 

[xxxv] Agency for Reincorporation and Normalization, “Reincorporation Glossary,” Accessed December 18, 2020. 

[xxxvi] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 104. 

[xxxvii] Felipe Puerta and Maria Paula Chaparro, “A Death Foretold: Colombia’s Crop Substitution Program,” InSight Crime, April 1, 2019. 

[xxxviii] “Final Agreement to End the Armed Conflict,” 3.

[xxxix] “La implementación de la política de Paz con Legalidad,” 2. 

[xl] “Gallup Poll #131 Colombia,” Gallup, June, 2019.  

[xli] “The Evolution of the Ex-FARC Mafia,” InSight Crime, November 11, 2019. 

[xlii] “Peace Accord Implementation in Colombia Continues to Progress Two Years In,” Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, April 9, 2019, 1. 

[xliii] Felipe Puerta and Maria Paula Chaparro. 

[xliv] Adriaan Alsema, “Colombia pursues 5-year coronavirus recovery plan,” Colombia Reports, November 12, 2020. 

[xlv] John Stedman, “Spoiler Problems in Peace Processes,” International Security 22 (Fall 1997): 5.  

[xlvi] “Los ejércitos ilegales que enfrentará la nueva cúpula militar,” El Tiempo, December 21, 2018. 

[xlvii] “Los ejércitos ilegales que enfrentará la nueva cúpula militar.”

[xlviii] “Disidencia de las FARC estarían en más de 10 departamentos, según informe de inteligencia militar,” Noticias Caracol, October 12, 2018. 

[xlix] “FARC Dissident Groups,” Colombia Peace, WOLA, April 24, 2020. 

[l] “Colombia: Gulf Clan,” Research Directorate, Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, Accessed December 18, 2020. 

[li] “ERPAC,” Colombia Reports, April 1, 2017. 

[lii] “ELN,” InSight Crime, October 27, 2020. 

[liii] “EPL,” InSight Crime, March 14, 2018. 

[liv] “FARC Dissident Groups.” 

[lv] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, December 19, 2020. Since the first drafting of this paper, five FARC excombatants have been killed. Here, I use the unofficial number reported by FARC party statements. I chose to use this number because official verification of each attack takes time—the latest UN report verified 224 killings—and because what really matters is ex-combatant perceptions of their own insecurity, which are likely more influenced by FARC’s own numbers than by official counts. See “Report of the Secretary-General,” United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia, September 25, 2020. 

[lvi] United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia, “Report of the Secretary-General,” June 26, 2020, 8. 

[lvii] “Los espacios de reincorporación de las Farc con más amenazas,” El Espectador, July 9, 2020. 

[lviii] Adriaan Alsema, “More than 1000 community leaders, human rights defenders assassinated during Colombia’s peace process: report,” Colombia Reports, August 24, 2020. 

[lix] “Criminal Governance Under Coronavirus,” InSight Crime, September 3, 2020. 

[lx] “Report of the Secretary-General,” June 26, 2020. 

[lxi] “Criminal Governance Under Coronavirus.”

[lxii] Carolina Castro et al., “Understanding the Killing of Social Leaders in Colombia During Covid-19,” Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, 2020. 

[lxiii] “Report of the Secretary-General,” September 25, 2020.

[lxiv] Serjio Jaramillo, former High Commissioner for Peace, quoted in Armando Niera, “¿Cuál es el balance del acuerdo de paz tras cuatro años de su firma?,” El Tiempo, November 24, 2020.

[lxv] “Macroeconomic Note No.20,” 3.  

[lxvi] Adriaan Alsema,“Employment in Colombia barely recovering from COVID-19 collapse,” Colombia Reports, September 1, 2020.

[lxvii] “Gran encuesta integrada de hogares (GEIH) Mercado laboral - Empleo y desempleo,” DANE, Accessed November 28, 2020.

[lxviii] “Report of the Secretary-General,” June 26, 2020. 

[lxix] “Report of the Secretary-General,” June 26, 2020. 

[lxx] Lara Loaiza, “Armed Groups in Colombia Target Children Amid Pandemic,” InSight Crime, June 22, 2020. 

[lxxi] “Así fue la llegada de los excombatientes de las Farc a Bogotá,” El Espectador, November 1, 2020.  

[lxxii] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, 8:22 PM, November 24, 2020.   

[lxxiii] FARC Party Bogotá (@farc_bogota), Twitter, November 24, 2020.  

[lxxiv] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, 9:09 AM, November 24, 2020.  

[lxxv] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, November 22, 2020.

[lxxvi] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, November 16, 2020.

[lxxvii] FARC Party (@PartidoFARC), Twitter, November 15, 2020.

[lxxviii] “Report of the Secretary General,” September 25, 2020. 

[lxxix] “Gobierno expide decreto: excombatientes tendrán acceso a tierras,” El Tiempo, November 24, 2020.  

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United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia. “Report of the Secretary-General.” September 25, 2020. https://colombia.unmissions.org/sites/default/files/en_-_n2024003.pdf.  

United Nations. “Integrated Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Standards.” August 1, 2006. 

by Sara Ragsdale

Before society as we know it, we as people roamed aimlessly throughout the world, in search not only of food but of companionship, of a sense of family. Yet, as families transformed into clans and clans into cities, it was no longer enough to just exist; to survive, one must thrive. However, the drive needed to truly get ahead, set forth a never ending progression of brutality from pillaging villages to murdering our enemies to all out world warfare. In modern application, governments/regimes control the means of force and the violent tendencies of nationalism in order to advance (what is presumably) national interests. Nonetheless, those who are oppressed by, unsatisfied with or just simply opposed to the current party, will seemingly rise up, spur new thought and incite extreme sentiments to make their voice heard. This rings especially true within Colombia, where violence has gone on for so long that the original perpetrators of the conflict are no longer alive, but their children and grandchildren have been ingrained and indoctrinated to carry on the fight. Creating an everlasting cycle of violence. While we may believe that the peace process belongs in the hands of the Duque regime and the paramilitary/guerilla groups, the true start of any revolutionary political endeavor for change, lies within the will of the people; from the American revolution to any constitutional amendment, the process of change is rarely started from the top-down, but instead by the people, their votes and their emotions. The problem within Colombia stems from society's acceptance of violence, which continues to reinforce younger generations to seek out a life of crime to better themselves instead of demanding and protesting for peace and progressive development from the government. Ultimately, no matter what progress is made in developing peace, the cycle of violence will continue to wreak havoc on the Colombian people until the media condemns he underlying problem of acceptance of circumstance and violence and presents a truthful representation of the situation at hand in a format available to both the urban and rural communities.

Development of Violence

Violence has existed as a natural part of the human experience for so long, that it has ingrained itself into every facet of existence. At the beginning of human history, we were constantly surrounded by enemies, even our closest genetic relatives, Chimps, were known to hunt and compete with us. Ultimately, establishing our mindset of violent conflict as “ancient and primal,​ a vestige of our pre-Homo ancestry rather than a recent adaptation to life in settled societies.”[i]​ This genetic disposition made it easier to survive in the prehistoric world of constant uncertainty, but since has continued to let us turn back the biological clock to solve our problems with violence instead of our developed techniques for mediation and compromise; letting personal conflict, murder and violent protest grow. 

While we recognize that globally, deaths as a complication of war have decreased, as a whole “conflict and violence are currently on the rise, with many conflicts today waged between non-state actors such as political militias, criminal, and international terrorist groups.”[ii] This rings especially true within Latin America where “with the exception of a few urban centers in the United States and South Africa, the latest annual ranking of the world’s 50 most homicidal cities by the Citizen Council for Public Security and Criminal Justice is composed entirely of Latin American and Caribbean locations.”[iii] However, we often (falsely) assume that such crime and cruelty towards fellow man is just a factor of decaying economies and political infrastructure, with Colombia often being used as a prime example.[iv] Yet, Colombia presents a more complex socio-political dynamic, challenging the traditional notation of conflict as a whole; having​ suffered through the extremes of armed conflict (with little true moments of resolution) for most of its history. Ultimately explaining that “economic factors alone cannot explain violence; rather, cultural factors must be taken into account.”[v]​ 

Influence of Society

Colombia’s history is full of violence from guerilla warfare to political assassinations, all of which has created a social norm in its civilians that continues to forge a deadly cycle of drugs, extortion and death. Since 1948 and the start of La Violencia, paramilitary groups (backed by international technology and funds) have raided, brutalized and all out destroyed the countryside in search of a lasting victory against the guerilla groups. This glorification of “force and the destruction of enemies using laws, sows delusions in people's minds. It legitimizes (the) notions of eliminating or defacing others or viewing others as toxic bodies devoid of rights and humanity or as diabolical stereotypes.”[vi] Colombia isn’t the first nation to fall victim to this pernicious mindset and most certainly will not be the last. However, the precedent set by those who have accepted and succumbed to these delusions is both dangerous and deadly. Despite experiencing civil conflict for the same amount of time as Colombia, Israel/Palenstine has become a nation torn apart by social differences created extreme violence that only became reinforced with each generation until the eventual split between the mainstream government and the militant opposition, leaving behind two incomplete states, with unstable governments and never ending violence. Colombia is headed down the same path, as the divide between urban and rural, rich and poor, and peace and war are constantly growing. In the end, “war has eroded the nation's moral fiber” and has even turned “negligible disputes at school (into) life threatening, signs of the deep, intangible harm civil war continues to inflict.”[vii] As the line between acceptable violence and going too far grows dimmer, so does the hope of the people and the future of Colombia as a whole. While there have been periods of “peace” the primary problem is that they never last, something always corrupts the people's hopes of safety back into fear for their life and ultimately, back into the violent mindset they’ve grown accustomed to; realistically, making any foreseeable steps forwards just a figment of imagination. To be able to make any skyscraper there needs to be a stable foundation, which is exactly what Colombia is lacking at this point. 

Seeing is Believing

In the rural areas of Colombia, violence is the only constant, the only form of stability, the only path to prosperity. From a young age, children learn of drug rings and watch violence in the streets, with many joining in as a way of life, as a way of survival. Yet it is these experiences that allows “the social and cultural norms that lead to the tolerance of violence (to be) learned in childhood, wherein a child experiences corporal punishment or witnesses violence in the family, in the media, or in other settings”​[viii] The problem is that violence isn’t just witnessed in the streets, but instead runs rampant behind closed doors, with “37% of women in Colombia experienc(ing)​ physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence at least once in their lifetime, and over 50% of Colombian men admitted to abusing their female partners.”​[ix] While domestic violence isn’t exclusively a problem within Colombia, the unique combination of civil conflict and household violence allows for the corruption of self, family and society as a whole. 

All the while, the newspapers, radio stations and televisions glorify this strife, retelling the tales of the injured, displaying flashy headlines and forcing everyone to relive through their traumas over and over again. Yet, the greater issue is that the “media has the power to influence​  individual beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors” for those fortunate enough to not have experienced​ the violence in real time. Ultimately producing “two effects: the individual or direct effect​ (private) or the social or indirect effect (public). In the individual effect, media information about new norms may persuade individuals to accept them. In the social effect, the information creates common knowledge of a norm and enhances social coordination as individuals more readily accept the information if they believe others have also accepted it.”​[x] Persuading Colombia as a whole to turn towards the violence, instead of away from it. 

The Power of the Media

From el tiempo to popular televisión, the direct correlation between violence and media representation only adds more fire to the flames of conflict. Within Colombia, “news is often reported as a series of individual events without adequate context, making it difficult to see the full story (and) identify what needs to be prevented as well as what can be done to promote the prevention of violence... Not having the full story generates misinformation synergy, creating distorted views of crime and race, and limits the opportunity to have a real conversation about what is going on. (Thus) the news media set agendas that define how viewers understand violence.”[xi] Ultimately, it is the manipulation of information to politicize the conflict and favor violence that has plagued the Colombian media (and mindset) for an extended period of time. “In the newspapers the use of the front page for the official version of events became frequent, while the accounts of correspondents or eyewitnesses were relegated to inside pages. This display of acts of violence on the front pages is corroborated by the journalists Circle of Bogota (CPB), which registered that between the last week of February and the first week of March 1987, El

Tiempo dedicated 55% of its page one news to violence, El Espcctador and El Pals 54% and El Colombiano 58%.”[xii] In the end, the Colombian media, by feeding the problem, must subsequently be the solution.  

Solvency

Colombia has bordered on the line of peace and all out war for almost a century, but no matter what steps have been taken by the government, the cycle of violence always returns. It is because the people and media of Colombia continue to accept violence and integrate it into a societal norm that steps must be taken to change the people’s mindset as a whole. I believe that there exists two possible solutions: (1.) use readily available technology throughout the countryside to tell stories that correct the previous notations that violence is acceptable, and (2.) curb the amount of violence displayed in the media. Neither of these options are mutually exclusive. Allowing for other peace seeking missions to occur at the same time. These are also budget friendly options that can occur without state support and can aid in providing these communities education and other resources.

With much of the violence in Colombia occuring in the countryside, traditional strategies of international interventions have been unsuccessful. Previously both the US and many international bodies have attempted to intervene in the Colombian conflict, but have focused primarily on the drug trade and used the internet/short supplied technology to communicate with the people. Instead of repeating the past, I advocate for the use of educational entertainment, such as “soap operas that illustrate positive social norms and are a cost-effective intervention.”[xiii]​ This method has been “conducted as a natural and randomized experiment in the rural indigenous community of San Bartolome Quialana in Oaxaca, Mexico using a multi-part soap opera radio program telling a story of a relationship that slowly becomes violent.” Using already readily available community loudspeakers and community gatherings, transmission should be able to reach all of the rural population and make the public feel interested instead of coerced into listening. When previously tested “the soap opera alone was sufficient to influence norms, and whether creating certainty about common knowledge from face-to-face interactions with community members enhanc(ing) the social effects.”14 Once established, this system can be used to address other topics, including “the need for contraception, domestic violence, HIV/AIDS, nutrition, how to achieve peace between countries in conflict and how to elevate the status of women in developing countries”[xiv] and even Covid-19.

Having already noted upon the highly politicized and targeted nature of the new media, by changing the way violence appears and is reported can change the mindset towards violence as a whole. This can be achieved in a variety of ways: giving more print time to the messages of the victims of violence, printing more “positive” stories, or just all out decreasing the amount of articles and images of violence published. This option (while not necessitating) would likely be supported by the current regime, due to the inherent understanding that any way to make it seem as if violence is decreasing and the peace agreement is being honored lends legitimacy to the success of the government. Ultimately just establishing another layer of legitimacy and means to truly change the violence problem within Colombia as a whole. 

 Bibliography

  1. Sciences, National Academies of, and Engineering, and Medicine. “Addressing the Social and Cultural Norms That Underlie the Acceptance of Violence.” National Center for Biotechnology Information. U.S. National Library of Medicine, April 6, 2018. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK493719/.
  2. Arias, Eric. “How Does Media Influence Social Norms? A Field Experiment on the Role of Common Knowledge.” How Does Media Influence Social Norms? A Field Experiment on the Role of Common Knowledge. | Gender Action Portal, July 2019. https://gap.hks.harvard.edu/how-does-media-influence-social-norms-field-experiment-rol e-common-knowledge. 
  3. Waldmann, Peter. “Is There a Culture of Violence in Colombia?” Taylor & Francis, 2007. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09546550701626836?src=recsy​ 
  4. Vassigh, Alidad. “Colombia, How War Spreads.” Worldcrunch, June 25, 2020. https://worldcrunch.com/culture-society/colombia-how-war-spreads-cultural-violence-int o-daily-life. 
  5. “Colombia: Violence & the Media.” Index of Censorship, 1988. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/03064228808534354.
  6. Waterman, H.“Are Humans Inherently Violent? What an Ancient Battle Site Tells Us.” Discover, May 17, 2019. https://www.discovermagazine.com/planet-earth/are-humans-inherently-violent-what-anancient-battle-site-tells-us
  7. UN. “A New Era of Conflict and Violence.” United Nations. United Nations, 2018. https://www.un.org/en/un75/new-era-conflict-and-violence.
  8. “Combating Domestic and Sexual Violence in Colombia.” Vital Voices, March 3, 2017. https://www.vitalvoices.org/2016/07/combating-domestic-and-sexual-violence-in-colomb ia/. 
  9. Chelala, César. “Soap Operas as Teaching Tools.” The Globalist, June 10, 2016. https://www.theglobalist.com/soap-operas-health-aids-teaching-tools/.

[i] ​H. ​Waterman,“Are Humans Inherently Violent? What an Ancient Battle Site Tells Us.” Discover, May 17, 2019, https://www.discovermagazine.com/planet-earth/are-humans-inherently-violent-what-an-ancient-battle-site-tells-us

[ii] ​UN, “A New Era of Conflict and Violence.” United Nations, United Nations, 2018, https://www.un.org/en/un75/new-era-conflict-and-violence. 

[iii] Tristan Clavel and Mike LaSusa, “Why Latin America Dominates Global Homicide Rankings.” InSight Crime,​    

March 13, 2018, https://www.insightcrime.org/news/analysis/why-latin-america-dominates-global-homicide-rankings/. 

[iv] Juan Roman, “GUERRILLA VIOLENCE IN COLOMBIA: EXAMINING CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES.”​     NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL, 1994, https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a284142.pdf. 

[v] ​Peter Waldmann, “Is There a Culture of Violence in Colombia?” Taylor & Francis, 2007, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09546550701626836?src=recsys. 

[vi] ​Alidad Vassigh, “Colombia, How War Spreads.” Worldcrunch, June 25, 2020, https://worldcrunch.com/culture-society/colombia-how-war-spreads-cultural-violence-into-daily-life. 

[vii] ​Vassigh, 2020.

[viii] ​National Academies of Sciences, and Engineering, and Medicine, “Addressing the Social and Cultural Norms That Underlie the Acceptance of Violence.” National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine, April 6, 2018. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK493719/. 

[ix] “Combating Domestic and Sexual Violence in Colombia.” Vital Voices, March 3, 2017,​           https://www.vitalvoices.org/2016/07/combating-domestic-and-sexual-violence-in-colombia/. 

[x]Eric Arias, “How Does Media Influence Social Norms? A Field Experiment on the Role of Common

Knowledge.” How Does Media Influence Social Norms? A Field Experiment on the Role of Common Knowledge, Gender Action Portal, July 2019, https://gap.hks.harvard.edu/how-does-media-influence-social-norms-field-experiment-role-common-knowledge. 

[xi] ​National Academies of Sciences, and Engineering, and Medicine, 2018. 

[xii]“Colombia: Violence & the Media.” Index of Censorship, 1988. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/03064228808534354.  

[xiii] National Academies of Sciences, and Engineering, and Medicine, 2018.  ​Arias, 2019.  

[xiv] Chelala, César. “Soap Operas as Teaching Tools.” The Globalist, June 10, 2016.

https://www.theglobalist.com/soap-operas-health-aids-teaching-tools/.

by Sophie Williams

Colombia has faced a turbulent history since its founding, characterized by conflict and civil unrest. For the last fifty years, Colombia has been fighting an armed guerrilla insurgency. In 2016 the greatest hope for an end to the most recent half century of conflict came with a peace agreement, in which FARC – the most prominent guerrilla group – agreed to put down their arms and integrate into society. However, the progress Colombia has accomplished in the past decade is being threatened by the COVID-19 Pandemic. Both the pandemic itself and the response to it, have produced conditions that could lead to the end of Colombia’s peace process. To maintain and create a lasting peace, Colombia must socialize the next generation to ensure that they adopt the norms of a peaceful society and strive to make them a part of the country’s future. However, economic hardship, the unavailability of schooling, and a focused effort to recruit children into armed groups during the pandemic, have amplified existing impediments to peace and created a new one: the inability for children to participate in a healthy and functioning form of society. Understandably, Colombia’s greatest concern has been to manage the short term ramifications of COVID-19; however, if Colombia does not prioritize the civic education and safety of the next generation, the peace process is likely to revert to a state worse than when they began the fight for peace. The pandemic has created a world that separates the youth from society, which makes them vulnerable. It is critical that communities and the government adopt a focused effort to instill the importance of the peace process in the youth and create ways to keep them connected to society in the present.

Context

Colombia has survived 50 years of continuous armed conflict within its own borders. The majority of the fighting has taken place in rural areas between guerrilla groups, such as FARC and ELN, and paramilitary or government forces. However, this is only the most recent conflict the Colombian people and government have endured. Within the last century Colombia also survived La Violencia (1948-1958) a decades long civil war that saw military coups and attempted dictatorships.[i] In 1958 the Colombian government agreed to rotate the two main political parties until 2002 – Conservative and Liberal – for the presidency, with the intention of stabilizing and strengthening Colombia. Both Conservative and Liberal presidents have attempted to end the violence through different strategies. However, administrations have often been plagued with corruption, so their endeavors were fruitless. In addition, governments were confronted by the rise to prominence of powerful guerilla forces in the 1960s. Further, in the 1970s and 1980s organized drug cartels arose out of resentment over unequal income distribution and Mexico’s crackdown on illegal drug networks. Several presidents attempted to negotiate settlements and ceasefires to end the conflicts, but they failed to create any possibility for long lasting reconciliation or peace. For decades, civilians and government officials continued to be victims of organized crime and guerrilla warfare. In 2016 a historic Peace Agreement was signed between FARC, a prominent guerrilla group, and the Colombian government, under the Santos administration. In this deal, a large proportion of FARC combatants agreed to surrender their weapons and reintegrate into mainstream society, with a representative political party in the government.

            In Colombia, status within society is largely based on a person’s geographic location. There is a large economic and educational gap between people living in rural and urban areas. Many armed groups, namely FARC, have taken advantage of this gap for recruitment in rural locations. During the pandemic, this divide has been amplified as guerrilla groups and drug traffickers impose their own lockdowns in rural areas when government forces pulled out. Studies show that Colombia is suffering a 55 percent increase in political violence, since the pandemic started, and more people have been restricted to the home. In addition, the majority of Colombia’s work force relies on informal labor, which has been made nearly impossible during the lockdown restrictions, as demonstrated by the rising unemployment levels.[ii] The Registry of victims, which counts the number of children forced into armed groups, estimates that 8,798 have been victims of child recruitment since lockdown began, due to the vulnerability of children during an economic crisis and their detachment from schools and communities.

The Impact of COVID-19 on Educating the Next Generation

Educating and socializing the next generation is crucial to the stability of Colombia's society in the long run, yet the pandemic and efforts to contain it have pushed education to the background. On March 15, the government took quick action to close borders, businesses, and schools, declaring it a “national coronavirus emergency;” the only component of this declaration yet to resume activities is schools. The policy response to COVID-19 will cause long lasting problems for children’s social and educational development and well-being. The short-term impact of children not attending school is already evident, with many stating that children have fallen behind in their schooling. A lack of access to adequate schooling does not just amount to a loss of education, but also the loss of a community that fosters child development and provides a “safe harbor.” A crucial component of socialization is an environment where children interact with others outside their nuclear family and come to learn social norms and proper behavior. Further, access to teachers and other students allows children to reach out to people they trust if they are suffering from domestic problems, especially for children in remote areas. Therefore, the greatest threat to the success of the peace process in Colombia is a lack of support for the next generation.

The effects of a lack of education are already beginning to show. Save the Children, an NGO conducting case studies on the impact of Covid-19, explains that “an entire generation's education has been impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic … the impact of this will last longer than the duration of the pandemic; nearly 8 in 10 (77%) parents or caregivers responding to the survey believe that their children have learned little to nothing since school closed, and millions face never returning once they reopen.”[iii] Without a sufficient education it will be harder for the rising generation to enter professions, become financially secure, and provide for their families. Colombia could be facing a future with an increasingly stratified society, an inadequately educated middle and lower class, and a smaller centralized educated elite in the urban areas. The World Bank estimates that learning loss over time could translate into 10 trillion dollars of lost earnings for the global economy.[iv]

The lack of educational services during the pandemic will disproportionately affect poor and rural children, who would have fewer chances to continue their participation with the learning process.[v] The Colombian school system moved online to continue student’s education while lockdown persists; however, it is estimated that less than 10 percent of students in rural areas have access to a computer or stable internet access to attend school.[vi] Without in-person learning many students will face disadvantages in their capabilities and education levels in the future. Several NGOs and other foundations, including COALICO, are attempting to use radio programs and mobile phones to reach “isolated children” to provide minimal educational services.[vii] Without an education and proper childhood development, rural children especially will have difficulty finding formal employment and advancing in society.

To fully participate in society as adults, children do not just need to receive an academic education, but they also need the benefit of socialization. During times of severe economic stress, it is not sufficient to rely on the home to teach children the norms and values of their society. Children develop dispositions, habits, social skills, a sense of duty, how to act in society, and even a sense of right and wrong from school. They learn the formative skills that allow them to participate appropriately and successfully within their society, so they can become law-abiding citizens who ultimately find jobs, raise families, and contribute to the political processes of their cities and state. Without schools open, it is difficult for children to receive a civic education. Especially in rural areas children are strongly influenced by the ideology and values of the guerrilla groups that control their region. Without school providing an alternative set of norms and values, children will become increasingly susceptible to misinformation (spread by violent groups) and will not possess the skills to combat this information.

Another important role schools play in Colombia, and in every country, is that they provide students with a safe space and a support system outside of the home to protect them from violence. Several NGOs including InSight Crime, who fight for children's welfare and protection against armed groups, have emphasized the immediate and violent impact that not being able to attend school has had on children, in both rural and urban areas.[viii] In a virtual setting, students do not have the same protections they are afforded during in-person learning, including the ability to spend time out of the home and away from situations that may put them in danger. Further, many students do not have adequate technological capabilities to stay in contact with their teachers, and if they do, they cannot have the private conversation they would have in school. Many students face dangerous home situations that have only been intensified by the pandemic and additional economic burden. Many children rely on their teachers as confidants because teachers care about their students’ wellbeing. A teacher’s support is especially needed during the pandemic when social work activities have largely been suspended. Without this form of protection many children suffering from domestic violence or threats to their families are falling through the cracks.

In summary, it is paramount to the success of future peace agreements and the continuation of a functioning society that the next generation is educated, socialized, and protected. There is already evidence that many children will lose years of their education, leaving Colombia with a society more divided by wealth and geography than before the pandemic began. Further, when students are not attending school they are not effectively prepared to participate in society’s shared norms, values, and behaviors. In addition, children who live in dangerous home environments are also falling through the cracks because they do not have school to provide a safe space. Schools are the cornerstone for developing full members of society, which is required of the next generation for Colombia to have a peaceful and prosperous future.

Schools are also a critical line of defense against child recruitment because they offer children connections to others in and outside their community and a safe space to reach out for help. A researcher at Coalición contra la vinculación de niñas, niños y jóvenes al conflicto armado en Colombia (COALICO), explained that “some families ignore or legitimize the recruitment of their children out of financial desperation,” a common occurrence during desperate economic crises.[ix] As mentioned above, schools aid in protecting children from domestic violence and criminal violence by providing a support system and a physical location where they are safe. InSight Crime argues that “[they] have noticed many violent acts against children during the lockdown. From the start of the lockdown until mid-May [they] had seen 133 violent acts, which overall affected 7,142 children (recruited, displaced, injured, or killed).”[x] During the pandemic many militant groups have taken advantage of online school to recruit increasingly high numbers of children whose families are suffering from unemployment. The most common threats to a child's education are financially motivated or fear based, both of which have drastically increased by children's containment inside the home. Virtual learning has fostered an environment that separates children from society, has left many lower income or rural students incapable of attending school at all, and has sacrificed one of the country’s most promising ways to protect children from armed groups and drug traffickers. 

The Impact of the Pandemic on Child Recruitment 

Child recruitment is likely the most immediate threat to the next generation's involvement in and support for the peace process. The socio-economic fallout from the pandemic has provided the ideal conditions for recruiters during a resurgence of conflict and violence.[xi] Children are especially vulnerable to financial incentives and recruitment tactics when their families are struggling and they are isolated from friends and their communities. In addition, the government and other organizations that aid in stopping child recruitment have been largely suspended to observe lockdown requirements, which allows the armed groups to gain more control and territory. If the next generation largely falls to armed groups or their mentality then the future of Colombia's government, the peace process, and Colombia as a united nation itself will be at risk. 

Colombia’s citizens and government have been fighting to end child recruitment for decades, but sadly it remains a lucrative business for many armed groups to gain new members and foot soldiers. The Coronavirus Pandemic and subsequent lockdown have amplified the problem.[xii] The United Nations, just before the pandemic, “denounced the trend as it reported 293 children had been forced to join armed groups in the previous year, 73 percent more than in 2017.[xiii] Although this number may seem miniscule in the larger context, it is important to remember all of the unreported cases that grow this number drastically. COALICO has estimated that recent figures show a further spike it recruitment activity and success, with 190 minors recruited up until June of this year.[xiv] This data demonstrates an additional concern: there is a direct correlation between the large scale and continued increase in the success of child recruitment and the restrictions imposed by the lockdown.

Armed groups have taken full advantage of schools’, the government’s, and NGOs’ inability to protect children during these hard times. Armed groups, both guerillas and cartels, have utilized the pandemic to impose their own “lockdown” and expand their control. The Humanitarian interviewed teachers and NGOs who explained that “some children are forced into armed gangs, but most are seduced by the prospect of regular food on the table or false promises like riches or women.”[xv] The pandemic has given armed groups a chance to impose a further fear on the Colombian people: “economic control.” Colombia’s Inspector General asserted that “during the pandemic these groups have made a big effort to show their power, not only armed but economic, and they are concerning us in the way they are recruiting.”[xvi] The increase in child recruitment has been made possible for the majority of armed groups because of the socioeconomic struggles of families, reliant on informal work, during the pandemic. Julius Castellanos, a researcher at COALICO, emphasized that armed groups have “seized” on the opportunity to co-opt or threaten these children, who are home with their parents, to provide food or money in return for “joining up.”[xvii] These practices are further reinforced if parents give their consent, which has become increasingly more common as adults grow to appreciate the security, food, and or money they receive from the criminal group that recruited their children.[xviii] The impact of these recruitment tactics are most forceful in rural or poorer neighborhoods, where families are going hungry, since they are out of work. Maria Paula Martinez, the director of Save the Children of Colombia, said “many armed groups are targeting the poorest villages to offer kids work picking coca leaves or participating in other illicit activities.”[xix] The economic hardships imposed on families during the pandemic has made child recruitment an increasingly lucrative tactic for armed groups and drug traffickers.

In addition to the financial incentives of joining an armed group, increased by shrinking economic opportunity from the pandemic, the greatest advantage recruiters now have is the change to children's social lives because it makes them more vulnerable to recruitment. An Indigenous Governor, Nora Elena Taquinas, has seen firsthand how the pandemic restrictions on activities such as “studying, sports, family, and social recreation,” have led to the increase in disappearances in their territory.[xx] Given the evidence that the pandemic has compounded the already tragic levels of child recruitment in Colombia, it is clear that the continuation of this trend will threaten the next generation’s will to fight for peace in their country.

Closing

Governments around the world are facing a rising generation that will be less educated and unequipped with the necessary understanding of social norms to participate in functioning society – Colombia is no different in this regard. However, Colombia faces a complicating concern: maintaining a fragile peace. The pandemic and subsequent lockdowns have enabled militant groups to take advantage of children because they have been left without the safety network and community provided by their schools. This is compounded by economic pressure imposed on their families due to the lockdowns and rise in violence from militant groups. Children need school to provide not only an academic education, but also a sense of community, purpose, connection to people outside their family, protection from violence, and civic education. During the Pandemic, children have been isolated from their communities and kept from acquiring the social norms they will need to become productive citizens who value peace in their country. Despite the challenges of the pandemic, it might also present an opportunity – a rare moment where opposing political parties can come together over their differences, not for reconciliation, but to cooperate towards a unified goal: the continuation of a free and peaceful Colombian society. Colombia’s leaders have saved their country from ruin before with monumental policies, for instance when they amended their constitution to alternate the presidency between the Conservative and Liberal parties. Conflict has always presented the chance for people to come together. People may be dying in hospitals instead of on the battlefield, but Colombia is still fighting a war for its future. Uniting to save the future generation is the best path to maintaining peace in the face of the COVID-19 Pandemic. 

[i] “Colombia profile - Timeline,” BBC, August 8, 2018, https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-19390164.

[ii] OECD, "Participation rates and unemployment rates by age and sex: Colombia", in Country tables, OECD Publishing, Paris, September 2, 2020. https://doi-org.proxygw.wrlc.org/10.1787/b3c0cd39-en.

[iii] Jess Edwards, “Protect a Generation: The impact of Covid-19 on children’s lives,” resourcecentre.savethechildren.net, Save the Children International, 2020. https://resourcecentre.savethechildren.net/node/18218/pdf/vr59-01_protect_a_generation_report_en_0.pdf.

[iv] World Bank, COVID-19 Could Lead to Permanent Loss in Learning and Trillions of Dollars in Lost Earnings (Washington, DC: World Bank, June 18, 2020), https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2020/06/18/covid-19-could-lead-to-permanent-loss-in-learning-and-trillions-of-dollars-in-lost-earnings.

[v] World Bank

[vi] Luke Taylor, “How Colombia’s armed groups are exploiting COVID-19 to recruit children,” thenewhumanatarian.org, September 10, 2020. https://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/news-feature/2020/09/10/Colombia-conflict-armed-groups-child-recruitment.

[vii] OECD, "Participation rates and unemployment rates by age and sex: Colombia."

[viii] Lara Loaiza, “How Colombia’s Lockdown Created Ideal Conditions for Child Recruitment,” InSight Crime, August 28, 2020, https://www.insightcrime.org/news/analysis/colombia-lockdown-child-recruitment/#.

[ix] Lara Loaiza, “How Colombia’s Lockdown Created Ideal Conditions for Child Recruitment.”

[x] Lara Loaiza, “How Colombia’s Lockdown Created Ideal Conditions for Child Recruitment.”

[xi] Luke Taylor, “How Colombia’s armed groups are exploiting COVID-19 to recruit children.”

[xii] Mauricio Galindo Caballero, “Si situación de salud se estabiliza, Colombia lideraría la región: FMI,” ElTiempo.com, April 17, 2020. https://www.eltiempo.com/economia/sectores/coronavirus-hoy-en-vivo-asi-ve-el-fmi-a-colombia-en-medio-de-pandemia-485494.

[xiii] Mauricio Galindo Caballero, “Si situación de salud se estabiliza, Colombia lideraría la región: FMI.”

[xiv] Luke Taylor, “How Colombia’s armed groups are exploiting COVID-19 to recruit children.”

[xv] Luke Taylor, “How Colombia’s armed groups are exploiting COVID-19 to recruit children.”

[xvi] Luke Taylor, “How Colombia’s armed groups are exploiting COVID-19 to recruit children.”

[xvii] Amnesty International. “COLOMBIA: WHY DO THEY WANT TO KILL US?: LACK OF SAFE SPACE TO DEFEND HUMAN RIGHTS IN COLOMBIA.” Amnesty International Publications. October 8, 2020. https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/amr23/3009/2020/en/.

[xviii] Lara Loaiza, “How Colombia’s Lockdown Created Ideal Conditions for Child Recruitment.”

[xix] Luke Taylor, “How Colombia’s armed groups are exploiting COVID-19 to recruit children.”

[xx] Luke Taylor, “How Colombia’s armed groups are exploiting COVID-19 to recruit children.”

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Amnesty International. “COLOMBIA: WHY DO THEY WANT TO KILL US?: LACK OF SAFE SPACE TO DEFEND HUMAN RIGHTS IN COLOMBIA.”Amnesty International Publications. October 8, 2020. https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/amr23/3009/2020/en/.

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