Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Research ScholarshipMexico is ungoverned, on the verge of failing and local law enforcement cannot penetrate regions so crime ridden that lawlessness prevails. Self-policing militias known as ‘autodefensas’ are the exception to these claims, rising from municipalities exhibiting varying degrees of crime, indigenous population density and economic inequality. Yet none of these factors explain their origination because they are not necessarily indigenous, particularly crime ridden or display levels of poverty necessary to distinguish the regions where they are active from ones where they are not. Perhaps the autodefensa movement is best described as an armed form of protest designed to highlight societal ails...
Michoacán, Mexico has become a breeding ground for public corruption, drug trafficking organizations...
Rural social movements in Oaxaca are frequent targets of attacks by paramilitary groups and state ac...
This study, based on ethnographic analysis, reveals that municipal government elections in Mexico ha...
Explores the emergence of self-defense forces as a third front in Mexico’s drug war. Argues the geog...
Building on recent studies of civilian militias outside the context of civil war and state guidance,...
The monopoly of violence in the hands of the state is conceived as the principal vehicle to generate...
What explains the emergence of vigilante organizations? Throughout the world, vigilantes emerge to i...
This article examines the emergence of self-defense forces (autodefensas) in Michoacán (Mexico) in t...
This article explains why some indigenous communities in Mexico have been able to resist drug cartel...
The proliferation of armed, anti-crime self-defence groups (autodefensas) in Mexico since 2013 has s...
<p class="AbstractTxt">The so-called self-defense forces in Mexico must be seen as a form of vigilan...
Reflecting a more general regional trend in the rise of urban crime and violence throughout Latin Am...
This article examines the production and circulation of images around the autodefensa movement in Me...
This paper examines the relationship between neoliberalism and patterns of violence in Latin America...
The kidnaping, rape, mutilation, and murder of more than 400 women and girls in Juárez, Mexico since...
Michoacán, Mexico has become a breeding ground for public corruption, drug trafficking organizations...
Rural social movements in Oaxaca are frequent targets of attacks by paramilitary groups and state ac...
This study, based on ethnographic analysis, reveals that municipal government elections in Mexico ha...
Explores the emergence of self-defense forces as a third front in Mexico’s drug war. Argues the geog...
Building on recent studies of civilian militias outside the context of civil war and state guidance,...
The monopoly of violence in the hands of the state is conceived as the principal vehicle to generate...
What explains the emergence of vigilante organizations? Throughout the world, vigilantes emerge to i...
This article examines the emergence of self-defense forces (autodefensas) in Michoacán (Mexico) in t...
This article explains why some indigenous communities in Mexico have been able to resist drug cartel...
The proliferation of armed, anti-crime self-defence groups (autodefensas) in Mexico since 2013 has s...
<p class="AbstractTxt">The so-called self-defense forces in Mexico must be seen as a form of vigilan...
Reflecting a more general regional trend in the rise of urban crime and violence throughout Latin Am...
This article examines the production and circulation of images around the autodefensa movement in Me...
This paper examines the relationship between neoliberalism and patterns of violence in Latin America...
The kidnaping, rape, mutilation, and murder of more than 400 women and girls in Juárez, Mexico since...
Michoacán, Mexico has become a breeding ground for public corruption, drug trafficking organizations...
Rural social movements in Oaxaca are frequent targets of attacks by paramilitary groups and state ac...
This study, based on ethnographic analysis, reveals that municipal government elections in Mexico ha...