Co-founder of the Igarapé Institute and The SecDev Group
Robert Muggah is a political scientist, urbanist, and security expert. He is the co-founder of the Igarapé Institute and the SecDev Group,[1] where he is known for his work on urbanization, crime prevention, arms control, migration, cyber-security, the digital economy, conflict and development studies. He regularly advises national and city governments, management consulting and technology firms, United Nations agencies ,and the World Bank.
His work on designing interactive platforms to map arms transfers,[2] track homicide,[3] predict crime,[4] and promote police accountability[5] is globally recognized. He was listed as one of the top 100 most important people in violence prevention[6] and is the recipient of numerous honors, including the Lewis Perinbam Award[7] for outstanding humanitarian service and the Lind Fellowship in 2018.[8] One of his organization's, the Igarapé Institute, was ranked the world's top social policy think tank in 2019 by Prospect Magazine.[9]
He is the co-chair of the advisory committee of the Global Parliament of Mayors[13] and the Know Violence in Childhood Network[14] He was nominated by the UN Secretary General to advise a panel on Youth, Peace and Security[15] and is a fellow with the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime,[16] the Chicago Council on Global Affairs,[17] the Canadian Global Affairs Institute,[18] and the Global Council for the Future of Cities and Urbanization[19] and the Global Risk Report of the World Economic Forum. He sits on the boards of several technology start-ups.
Muggah has conducted extensive field research on armed violence, public security, fragile cities, population resettlement and climate action. His work on disarmament, demobilization and reintegration, urban warfare as well as stabilization operations in Latin America, Africa and Asia is widely cited. He has conducted multiple household surveys and studies on refugee militarization across Sub-Saharan Africa, the unintended consequences of relocating populations in Latin America and South Asia, the outcomes of community development and violence prevention programs, the future of peacekeeping missions, the implications of rapid urbanization, and the rise of cyber cartels and digital gangs.
Muggah is the author or editor of eight books. The most recent, Terra Incognita: 100 Maps to Survive the Next 100 Years, is co-authored with Ian Goldin and published by Penguin/Random House.[23] Two others, Relocation Failures in Sri Lanka[24] and Refugee Militarization in Africa[25] are focused on migration and resettlement. Two more, Stabilization Operations, Security and Development[26] and Security and Post-Conflict Reconstruction[27] are concerned with UN peace operations and international stability missions. The others, including the Global Burden of Armed Violence[28] and Open Empowerment,[29] are focused on real and virtual insecurity.
Muggah's research is widely reported in global media outlets. His research on organized crime, the future of cities, climate resilience and the impacts of COVID-19 has been featured by The Atlantic,[30] BBC,[31] CBC,[32] CNN, CBS,[33] The Globe and Mail,[34] Fast Company,[35] Financial Times,[36] Foreign Affairs,[37] Foreign Policy,[38] Globo News,[39] Le Monde,[40] Newsweek,[41] The New York Times,[42] and Wired Magazine,[43] among others. He delivered talks on the future of cities in TED in 2019, 2017[44] and 2015,[45] the World Governance Summit[46] in 2018 and at the World Economic Forum Summit in Davos in 2016, 2017[47] and 2019.[48] He has also spoken on new technologies[49] at the Web Summit in 2014, on smart policing[50] with Google in 2013 and on arms trafficking[51] in 2012.