There is an upsurge recently in the activities of bandits, militants, and kidnappers in many less developed nations in contemporary time culminating into mirage of socio-ethical problems and insecurity.
Every day, we are reminded of the changes needed for economic and social progress, but not that institutions are the channels through which such changes can happen. The list of social and economic ills to which this query refers is a case in point: the limited capacity of institutions is what exacerbates them all. We would do well to consider what is meant by (and can be accomplished through) participation, how participation grows out of democratic processes, how these processes depend on the structure of institutions, and how institutions originate from (and are supported by) human resources. Only then will we understand better the processes of progress and picture more accurately the necessarily diverse levels of the organizational setups on which progress depends.
Article Building Institutional Capacity for Development
This is very sensitive Question to answer could punch the Bureaus and the Government either directly or indirectly.
Most of the developing countries have corruption is deep rooted in the public administration. The Africa's politics are emerging from country to country but disguise silent way of exchanging the resources secretly.
Good Governance could empower to control the people and the democratic to make more effective.
The same is true of any developing countries in Asia and Africa to maintain the transparency until the goals could be achieved in their administration.
Intelligent matters to succeed all the administrative practices to save the citizens against all kind of atrocities in the country.
Most of the African countries political leaders/stakeholders have come across many challenges to maintain the peace and security in the native country and abroad also.
Military can able to protect the citizens and the community to save somehow how to control the mass and society.
Kidnappers in Thailand are more likely to target locals, particularly in the insurgency-affected Deep South region. The most common types of abduction in Thailand include basic opportunistic kidnap-for-ransom, high-net-worth individual kidnap-for-ransom, and political kidnapping. Victims are usually released unharmed and relatively quickly, though they could face the threat of injury or death during confinement.