This study, based on ethnographic analysis, reveals that municipal government elections in Mexico have become spaces of struggle among criminal groups striving to strengthen their presence throughout the territory. In municipal contexts characterised by institutional vacuums, delinquent organisations have succeeded in capturing political spaces. We argue that the continuous violence that has plagued the country since 2013 can be explained largely by factors of an institutional order coupled with distorted electoral processes in municipalities and states, exacerbated by widespread citizen disenchantment with democracy and especially manifest at the level of local government. This situation suggests the need for strategies that address the in...
Between 2005 and 2015, organized criminal groups murdered 209 politicians in Mexico. This paper expl...
The monopoly of violence in the hands of the state is conceived as the principal vehicle to generate...
Government and organized criminal groups co-exist in uneasy equilibrium. Criminal groups adjust thei...
The article describes the problem of organized crime in modern Mexico. It addresses the activities o...
Criminal violence is one of the top policy concerns among citizens throughout many Latin American co...
In this paper we analyze the effect of criminal violence on electoral participation in Mexico...
In this paper we analyze the effect of criminal violence on electoral participation in Mexico. Many ...
In this paper we analyze the effect of criminal violence on electoral participation in Mexico. Many ...
The following thesis outlines the current social and political situation surrounding organized crime...
textCrime and violence are central issues for citizens in new democracies, many of which are increas...
By combining techniques such as structured interviews and direct observation in meetings and other e...
This article explains a surprising wave of lethal attacks by drug cartels against hundreds of local ...
Between 2005 and 2015, organized criminal groups murdered 209 politicians in Mexico. This paper expl...
Michoacán, Mexico has become a breeding ground for public corruption, drug trafficking organizations...
This paper seeks to identify the key factors that explain why local officials in Mexico — mayors, fo...
Between 2005 and 2015, organized criminal groups murdered 209 politicians in Mexico. This paper expl...
The monopoly of violence in the hands of the state is conceived as the principal vehicle to generate...
Government and organized criminal groups co-exist in uneasy equilibrium. Criminal groups adjust thei...
The article describes the problem of organized crime in modern Mexico. It addresses the activities o...
Criminal violence is one of the top policy concerns among citizens throughout many Latin American co...
In this paper we analyze the effect of criminal violence on electoral participation in Mexico...
In this paper we analyze the effect of criminal violence on electoral participation in Mexico. Many ...
In this paper we analyze the effect of criminal violence on electoral participation in Mexico. Many ...
The following thesis outlines the current social and political situation surrounding organized crime...
textCrime and violence are central issues for citizens in new democracies, many of which are increas...
By combining techniques such as structured interviews and direct observation in meetings and other e...
This article explains a surprising wave of lethal attacks by drug cartels against hundreds of local ...
Between 2005 and 2015, organized criminal groups murdered 209 politicians in Mexico. This paper expl...
Michoacán, Mexico has become a breeding ground for public corruption, drug trafficking organizations...
This paper seeks to identify the key factors that explain why local officials in Mexico — mayors, fo...
Between 2005 and 2015, organized criminal groups murdered 209 politicians in Mexico. This paper expl...
The monopoly of violence in the hands of the state is conceived as the principal vehicle to generate...
Government and organized criminal groups co-exist in uneasy equilibrium. Criminal groups adjust thei...