Norway rated most peaceful nation
A study has ranked Norway as the most peaceful country and Iraq as
the least in a survey of 121 countries.
The Global Peace Index, compiled by the Economist Intelligence Unit,
looked at 24 factors to determine how peaceful each country was.
It places the US at 96th on the list and the UK at 49th, while New
Zealand ranks second and Japan fifth.
The authors say it is the first attempt to produce such a
wide-ranging league table of how peaceful countries are.
Factors examined by the authors include levels of violence and
organised crime within the country and military expenditure.
The survey has been backed by the Dalai Lama, Archbishop Desmond
Tutu, former US President Jimmy Carter and US economist Joseph Stiglitz,
who are all Nobel prize laureates.
It is also supported by Queen Noor of Jordan.
'Wake-up call'
Scandinavian and other European countries generally performed well in
the survey. But Britain's ranking comes partly from its involvement in
Iraq and other conflicts.
The United States is 96th - between Yemen and Iran - again because of
such things as its military spending, its involvement in Iraq, violent
crime at home, and a high prison population.
The survey also places Russia and Israel at the wrong end of the
scale - 118th and 119th respectively.
The brainchild of Steve Killelea, an Australian entrepreneur, the
survey is meant to inform governments, international organisations, and
campaign groups.
Mr Killelea said: "This is a wake-up call for leaders around the
globe.
Countries need to become more peaceful to solve the major challenges
that the world faces - from climate change to decreasing biodiversity.
"There is also a strong case for the world becoming more peaceful and
it is now crucial for world leaders and business to take a lead," he
said.
He added that the high positions of Germany, which ranked 12th, and
Japan revealed that "there can be light at the end of what may seem at
the moment like a very dark tunnel."
The study is published just before the G8 summit of leading countries
next week. The authors say they are trying to supplant what they call
some "woolly" definitions of peace with a scientific approach, that
includes levels of violent crime, political instability, and a country's
relations with its neighbours.
But questions have been raised over the way some of these factors are
brought together.
The authors themselves acknowledge that there is a lack of data in
many countries. What impact the new survey will have is unclear. The
authors also argue that some countries - like Japan - may benefit from
sheltering under the US military umbrella.
(CNN)
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