The Institute for Economics and Peace’s 2024 Global Peace Index reveals Colombia, Haiti, Venezuela, and Mexico rank as Latin America’s least peaceful countries.
Colombia holds its position as the region’s most violent nation for the fourth consecutive year, placing 146th globally among 163 assessed countries.
Haiti follows closely at 143rd place after suffering the region’s worst peace deterioration and fifth-largest decline worldwide. Venezuela ranks 142nd while Mexico occupies the 138th position in the comprehensive evaluation of global peacefulness.
The Index evaluates nations through 23 indicators spanning social security, ongoing conflicts, and militarization. This methodology measures both actual violence and citizens’ safety perceptions across countries.
Argentina leads Latin American peace efforts at 47th globally with a score of 1.855. Uruguay and Costa Rica follow at 52nd and 58th places respectively, highlighting stark regional security divides.
Colombia, Haiti, and Venezuela Lead Latin America’s Most Dangerous Nations List. (Photo Internet reproduction)
Armed dissident groups and drug cartels fuel Colombia’s persistent violence, particularly targeting marginalized communities. Violence costs Colombia 28.6% of its GDP, placing it among eight nations where conflict consumes over one-fifth of the economy.
Global Peace Decline
Haiti’s deterioration affects all measured domains, especially safety and security. The Caribbean nation now ranks last in its subregion and 19th worst in Latin America.
Political instability and economic crisis drive Venezuela‘s ongoing unrest. Mexico struggles with cartel violence despite modest improvements in certain indicators.
Global peace levels fell 0.56% in 2024, continuing a troubling 16-year trend. Overall peacefulness has declined 6% since measurements began in 2008.
Europe remains the world’s most peaceful region with eight of the ten most peaceful nations. North America experienced the largest regional decline yet still ranks third most peaceful globally behind Europe and Asia-Pacific.
Corruption, weak territorial control, and economic inequality continue undermining stability across Latin America, creating conditions where violence thrives despite isolated improvements in certain countries.