Toward a Sustainable Exit from the Cycle of Insecurity

On its first day, Thursday, June 26, 2025, the Kongrè Patriyotik pou yon Sovatj Nasyonal (Patriotic Congress for a National Salvation), an initiative led by a consortium of institutions including Quisqueya University (UniQ) and supported by civil society organizations, brought together several dozen people at NH El Rancho in Pétion-Ville. The goal: to reflect on current issues, particularly the security crisis. The day, marked by the quality of the presentations and exchanges, also featured two panels focused on possible strategies for a “sustainable exit from the cycle of insecurity.”

The first panel on this theme, moderated by Professor Félix Jean-Louis, included Jake Johnston and Ricardo Seitenfus. The discussions centered on transnational crime and the international community’s inability to respond.

In his remarks, Jake Johnston, an economist and research director at the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), presented the findings of his work on the effects of international aid in Haiti. He demonstrated how this aid system has weakened the capacity of public institutions to meet the rea

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