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Pablo Dreyfus
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Dreyfus encouraged better accounting of weapons to prevent them falling into the hands of Wikipedia:criminal organizations.[1] He pushed for legislation requiring stricter controls on the labelling of ammunition.[1] He raised the alarm about practices that facilitated Wikipedia:arms smuggling in Argentina (WP), Brazil, Wikipedia:Paraguay and Venezuela (WP), which led to legislation in Brazil.[1][4] He supported the development of anti-gunrunning security in Mozambique,[1] Angola, El Salvador and other countries.
Following the theft of grenades from an Argentine military garrison in 2006, Dreyfus remarked "If a supermarket can keep control of the amount of peas it has in stock, surely a military organization could and should be able to do the same with equal if not greater efficiency with its weapons. The key words are logistics, control, security."[1]
Born in Buenos Aires (WP),[1] Dreyfus got his Wikipedia:PhD in International Relations at the Wikipedia:Institut Universitaire de Hautes Études Internationales (Graduate Institute of International Studies) where his emphasis was Transnational Crime patterns.[5] At 2009, he was the research coordinator of the Small Arms and Light Weapons cluster in a local NGO in Rio, Associate Professor of the Superior Institute of Religious Studies, consultant of Wikipedia:Small Arms Survey, senior researcher and professor of the Wikipedia:Latin American Social Sciences Institute (FLACSO) and coordinator of the Wikipedia:Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES) Brazilian think tank of regional security.[5] Dreyfus became better known in the English-speaking world for his work for Wikipedia:Viva Rio.[2][3]
His wife, sociologist and researcher Ana Carolina Rodrigues, was with him at the time of the accident.[1][6] Ana herself was finishing her PhD in one of the top research institutes of Rio de Janeiro, the Instituto Universitário de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro (IUPERJ) at Wikipedia:Universidade Cândido Mendes. She was working with children involved in organized armed violence, but had previous worked on social movements and minorities.
Pablo was also the son of renowned and award-winning Argentine ad man, Gabriel Dreyfus.[7][8]
Citations[edit]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Key figures in global battle against illegal arms trade lost in Air France crash; Wikipedia:Herald Scotland, 6 Jun 2009
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Guns in Brazil; Disarming: A law that might save many lives Nov 20th 2003 Wikipedia:The Economist
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Please Don't Shoot; Marcela Sanchez May 5, 2005, Wikipedia:Washington Post
- ↑ Brazil: The 'massacre of a generation' by foreign-made guns Interpress Service, Goliath, 7th Dec 2006
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Pablo Gabriel Dreyfus Curriculum System of Curriculum Lattes
- ↑ Agony for Brazil jet crash families; Gabriel Elizondo, Wikipedia:Al Jazeera: Americas
- ↑ Argentineans in Air France's missing plane M24 Digital
- ↑ Compañeros de Pablo Dreyfus lo despiden desde la web El Argentino
External links[edit]
Conventional Ammunition in Surplus A Reference Guide. Edited by James Bevan, January 2008. Co-published with BICC, FAS, GRIP, and SEESAC with support from the German Federal Foreign Office