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World Becoming Less Violent: Despite Global Conflict, Statistics Show Violence In Steady Decline

World More Peaceful

By SETH BORENSTEIN   10/22/11 03:31 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- It seems as if violence is everywhere, but it's really on the run.

Yes, thousands of people have died in bloody unrest from Africa to Pakistan, while terrorists plot bombings and kidnappings. Wars drag on in Iraq and Afghanistan. In peaceful Norway, a man massacred 69 youths in July. In Mexico, headless bodies turn up, victims of drug cartels. This month eight people died in a shooting in a California hair salon.

Yet, historically, we've never had it this peaceful.

That's the thesis of three new books, including one by prominent Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker. Statistics reveal dramatic reductions in war deaths, family violence, racism, rape, murder and all sorts of mayhem.

In his book, Pinker writes: "The decline of violence may be the most significant and least appreciated development in the history of our species."

And it runs counter to what the mass media is reporting and essentially what we feel in our guts.

Pinker and other experts say the reality is not painted in bloody anecdotes, but demonstrated in the black and white of spreadsheets and historical documents. They tell a story of a world moving away from violence.

In his new book, "The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined," Pinker makes the case that a smarter, more educated world is becoming more peaceful in several statistically significant ways. His findings are based on peer-reviewed studies published by other academics using examinations of graveyards, surveys and historical records:

_ The number of people killed in battle – calculated per 100,000 population – has dropped by 1,000-fold over the centuries as civilizations evolved. Before there were organized countries, battles killed on average more than 500 out of every 100,000 people. In 19th century France, it was 70. In the 20th century with two world wars and a few genocides, it was 60. Now battlefield deaths are down to three-tenths of a person per 100,000.

_ The rate of genocide deaths per world population was 1,400 times higher in 1942 than in 2008.

_ There were fewer than 20 democracies in 1946. Now there are close to 100. Meanwhile, the number of authoritarian countries has dropped from a high of almost 90 in 1976 to about 25 now.

Pinker says one of the main reasons for the drop in violence is that we are smarter. IQ tests show that the average teenager is smarter with each generation. The tests are constantly adjusted to keep average at 100, and a teenager who now would score a 100 would have scored a 118 in 1950 and a 130 in 1910. So this year's average kid would have been a near-genius a century ago. And that increase in intelligence translates into a kinder, gentler world, Pinker says.

"As we get smarter, we try to think up better ways of getting everyone to turn their swords into plowshares at the same time," Pinker said in an interview. "Human life has become more precious than it used to be."

Pinker argued his case in a commentary this past week in the scientific journal Nature. He has plenty of charts and graphs to back up his claims, including evidence beyond wartime deaths – evidence that our everyday lives are also less violent:

_ Murder in European countries has steadily fallen from near 100 per 100,000 people in the 14th and 15th centuries to about 1 per 100,000 people now.

_ Murder within families. The U.S. rate of husbands being killed by their wives has dropped from 1.2 per 100,000 in 1976 to just 0.2. For wives killed by their husbands, the rate has slipped from 1.4 to 0.8 over the same time period.

_ Rape in the United States is down 80 percent since 1973. Lynchings, which used to occur at a rate of 150 a year, have disappeared.

_ Discrimination against blacks and gays is down, as is capital punishment, the spanking of children, and child abuse.

But if numbers are too inaccessible, Pinker is more than happy to provide the gory stories illustrating our past violence. "It is easy to forget how dangerous life used to be, how deeply brutality was once woven into the fabric of daily existence," Pinker writes in his book.

He examines body counts, rapes, sacrifice and slavery in the Bible, using an estimate of 1.2 million deaths detailed in the Old Testament. He describes forms of torture used in the Middle Ages and even notes the nastiness behind early day fairy tales, such as the evil queen's four gruesome methods for killing Snow White along with a desire to eat her lungs and liver.

Even when you add in terrorism, the world is still far less violent, Pinker says.

"Terrorism doesn't account for many deaths. Sept. 11 was just off the scale. There was never a terrorist attack before or after that had as many deaths. What it does is generate fear," he said.

It's hard for many people to buy the decline in violence. Even those who deal in peace for a living at first couldn't believe it when the first academics started counting up battle deaths and recognized the trends.

In 1998, Andrew Mack, then head of strategic planning for U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, said a look at the statistics showed the world was becoming less violent. The reaction from his professional peacekeeping colleagues?

"Pffft, it's not true," they told Mack, arguing that the 1990s had to be the worst decade in U.N. history. It wasn't even close.

Joshua Goldstein, a professor of international relations at American University and author of "Winning the War on War," has also been telling the same story as Pinker, but from a foreign policy point of view. At each speech he gives, people bring up America's lengthy wars in the Middle East. "It's been a hard message to get through," he acknowledged.

"We see the atrocities and they are atrocious," Goldstein said. "The blood is going to be just as red on the television screens."

Mack, who's now with Simon Fraser University in Canada, credits the messy, inefficient and heavily political peacekeeping process at the U.N., the World Bank and thousands of non-governmental organizations for helping curb violence.

The "Human Security Report 2009/2010," a project led by Mack and funded by several governments, is a worldwide examination of war and violence and has been published as a book. It cites jarringly low numbers. While the number of wars has increased by 25 percent, they've been minor ones.

The average annual battle death toll has dropped from nearly 10,000 per conflict in the 1950s to less than 1,000 in the 21st century. And the number of deadliest wars – those that kill at least 1,000 people a year – has fallen by 78 percent since 1988.

Mack and Goldstein emphasize how hard society and peacekeepers have worked to reduce wars, focusing on action taken to tamp down violence, while Pinker focuses on cultural and thought changes that make violence less likely. But all three say those elements are interconnected.

Even the academics who disagree with Pinker, Goldstein and Mack, say the declining violence numbers are real.

"The facts are not in dispute here; the question is what is going on," John Mearsheimer, a professor of political science at the University of Chicago and author of "The Tragedy of Great Power Politics."

"It's been 21 years since the Cold War ended and the United States has been at war for 14 out of those 21 years," Mearsheimer said. "If war has been burned out of the system, why do we have NATO and why has NATO been pushed eastward...? Why are we spending more money on defense than all other countries in the world put together?"

What's happening is that the U.S. is acting as a "pacifier" keeping the peace all over the world, Mearsheimer said. He said like-minded thinkers, who call themselves "realists" believe "that power matters because the best way to survive is to be really powerful." And he worries that a strengthening China is about to upset the world power picture and may make the planet bloodier again.

And Goldstein points out that even though a nuclear attack hasn't occurred in 66 years – one nuclear bomb could change this trend in an instant.

Pinker said looking at the statistics and how violent our past was and how it is less so now, "makes me appreciate things like democracy, the United Nations, like literacy."

He and Goldstein believe it's possible that an even greater drop in violence could occur in the future.

Goldstein says there's a turn on a cliche that is apt: "We're actually going from the fire to the frying pan. And that's progress. It's not as bad as the fire."

___

Researcher Julie Reed Bell contributed to this report.

___

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WASHINGTON -- It seems as if violence is everywhere, but it's really on the run. Yes, thousands of people have died in bloody unrest from Africa to Pakistan, while terrorists plot bombings and kidnap...
WASHINGTON -- It seems as if violence is everywhere, but it's really on the run. Yes, thousands of people have died in bloody unrest from Africa to Pakistan, while terrorists plot bombings and kidnap...
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07:43 AM on 11/07/2011
Two points:
1. The claim that battlefield deaths has fallen may only be the result of air-based weaponry including jet fighters, missiles and drones. The problem with this is the desensitizing nature of remote fighting. It becomes a video game. This does not lead to a decrease in violence but rather to an increase in violence because the lack of personal danger for the perpetrator leads to casual acceptance and escalation of air-based weaponry including finding new places to employ them.
2. Pinker is a Zionist and promotes the U.S. because of its support for Israel. He terms 9/11 a terrorist attack when actually it was a legitimate attack against a U.S. that was attacking civilians in the Middle East and supporting the creeping invasion of Palestine with its deportation and murder of Palestinians. He refers to Middle East "atrocities" but the atrocities are the actions of Zionist conquest and U.S. imperialism. The "atrocities" are not the attempts by the local citizenry to defend against Zionist and U.S. aggression and to reclaim land and resources seized by Zionists and the U.S.

(For Mearseimer to refer to the U.S. as a "pacifier" is ludicrous. The U.S. is a world leader in violence, invasion and weaponry. Pacification is a euphemism for U.S. imperialism, which, by the way, is turning the U.S. into a failed country.)
12:06 PM on 11/02/2011
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7e3KrWaijPg This link is a teenage girl singing about making a difference. Although there are photos of the Occupy movement throughout, the real message is "use your voice" ... not be a bully. Created by I am Bullyproof.com, it was shot w/a photo cam and from the heart. There is so much violence on TV, on video games, in movies. Here's hoping the media can get behind more positive images and messages for our youth. After all, aren't they the ones who will be creating our tomorrow?..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
twoshoes4u
08:44 AM on 10/26/2011
And OB passed his hand over all and declared it was good..troops will be coming home and yea violence is ebbing...surely his re-election is assured. Gather all ye sheep at the polls for OB has brought about change in the final hours as he promised 3-1/2 years hence. Bedeck The Savior with balls of folly. Fa La La
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
messy
artist, writer, adventurer
02:09 PM on 10/25/2011
The reason is that people are richer than they were in the past and there's much more stuff to go around. Two hundred years ago, the rich lived in poverty compared to the lower middle class today.
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TheCycad
Shape The Future, Don't Be Swept Away By It
10:14 AM on 10/25/2011
"reality is not painted in bloody anecdotes, but demonstrated in the black and white of spreadsheets and historical documents. They tell a story of a world moving away from violence."

Exactly, anecdotes and personal opinion do not factor into the equation.

Yet even though violence has declined... it doesn't mean we should stop trying for peace.

Bring it even lower!
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
messy
artist, writer, adventurer
02:08 PM on 10/25/2011
That's because we're making love not war. There are now seven BILLION people.....
08:38 AM on 10/25/2011
Might e because the bullies of the world are dying out.
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grayplace
Life's a dream within a dream.
08:51 PM on 10/24/2011
Just because the violence has reduced doesn't mean the hatred has reduced with it.
07:28 PM on 10/24/2011
I'm happy to celebrate the positive outlook associated with these statistics, and I will certainly need to take a closer look at his recent work, but I think they are in part, an artifact of the strange perspective on violence that is created by a world of many billions of people. In order to compare different time periods and cultures, we use percentages of dead. This is fine for a statistical portrait, but it doesn't capture the lived experience of violence that we see reflected in our lives.

In a sense, the idea that violence is in decline is the statistical result of there being so many people that it doesn’t matter as much when thousands are killed. At least one version of the long view is that the value of individual lives has plummeted. That, in itself, is an insidious kind of crime. For most of human prehistory, each individual was most precious. Today, we are lucky if someone really cares at all about what happens to us. We live in an age where whole populations are written off. This is part of what happens when we think of people as numbers rather than individuals. On the one hand it can't and shouldn't be avoided, and on the other, we must remember that there are other ways to conceptualize and think about the issue... lest we become another number.
08:21 PM on 10/24/2011
What your saying is the exact opposite of historical fact. In hunter gatherer societies the rate of death by homicide for males is about 45% (Jared Diamond, "Guns, Germs & Steel"). Standards of living, especially for the poor, have increased dramatically since even a few decades ago, not to mention a century ago. Life was short and cheap in earlier societies. We are more aware of suffering now, that is the only difference.
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Tunghoy
My other car is a TARDIS
02:36 PM on 10/24/2011
Steven Pinker evidently never went into a Wal-Mart on Black Friday.
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nohopepope2187
Honest † Impartial † Enlightening † Centrist
08:55 AM on 10/24/2011
I remember the article where the Obama campaign tried to take credit for the declining crime rate, stating that the Obama's election created a "collective inspiration" that made criminals re-think their ways. LMFAO!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/06/obama-effect-crime_n_998498.html
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nohopepope2187
Honest † Impartial † Enlightening † Centrist
08:52 AM on 10/24/2011
I have never read about so many kidnappings, murders, and bodily dismemberments until the past few years, and you want to try to convince me crime is on the decline?
10:46 AM on 10/24/2011
Yeah, forget actually studying the evidence, let's just rely on personal anecdotes of media coverage!
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TheCycad
Shape The Future, Don't Be Swept Away By It
10:11 AM on 10/25/2011
those are all anecdotes.

the historical fact is that violence has declined.
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nohopepope2187
Honest † Impartial † Enlightening † Centrist
01:10 PM on 10/25/2011
The world is so much more populated that in the past that I find that statistically improbable. Unless a greater number of people in the world is averaging out the crime that's probably ascending anyways.
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Marisa Stein
~I solemly swear that I am up to no good~
08:09 AM on 10/24/2011
Im sure BHO will try to take credit for this too
06:30 AM on 10/24/2011
Does that mean the US can stop being the peace keeper? That 50% of our taxes can now go to other things like education?
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JimInHouston
Arma virumque cano...
04:54 PM on 10/26/2011
Perhaps you should review the distribution of the national budget again.
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c-tom
Badges we don't need no stinking badges
01:40 AM on 10/24/2011
"_ The rate of genocide deaths per world population was 1,400 times higher in 1942 than in 2008."

If the book really uses that stat the book is seriously flawed.
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TheCycad
Shape The Future, Don't Be Swept Away By It
10:12 AM on 10/25/2011
why?... what's wrong with that statistic?
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c-tom
Badges we don't need no stinking badges
03:15 PM on 10/25/2011
It's meaningless - like comparing tsunami deaths between a year with an historic tsunami v. a year with no major ones.
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calmly2
Words matter.
12:41 AM on 10/24/2011
Diplomacy works.