In response to a crime epidemic afflicting Latin America since the early 1990s, several countries in the region have resorted to using heavy-force police or military units to physically retake territories de facto controlled by non-State criminal or insurgent groups. After a period of territory control, the heavy forces hand law enforcement functions in the retaken territories to regular police officers, with the hope that the territories and their populations will remain under the control of the state. To a varying degree, intensity, and consistency, Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, and Jamaica have adopted such policies since the mid-1990s. During such operations, governments need to pursue two interrelated objectives: to better establish the st...
How do states regulate drug trafficking? The sale of illicit drugs generates an estimated US$870 bi...
2011 Winner of the Charles H. Levine Memorial Book Prize of the International Political Science Asso...
Organizers: Benjamin Lessing (UChicago, USA), Joana Monteiro (FGV, Brazil), and Michel Misse (UFRJ, ...
In response to a crime epidemic afflicting Latin America since the early 1990s, several countries in...
yesOver the last quarter century post-conflict and post-authoritarian transitions in Latin America h...
Organized crime and illegal economies generate multiple threats to states and societies. But althoug...
Over the past generation Latin America has experienced high levels of criminal violence associated w...
Faced with the violence, criminality and insecurity now threatening peace and democratic governance ...
Over the past two decades, the armed forces have increasingly been asked to take an active role in t...
This article aims to explain, not so much the existence of organized crime and violence in Latin Ame...
Latin America is more democratic today than in the recent past, yet in places also far more violent....
Crime increase in Latin America has occurred in parallel with a change in police policy in territori...
In this article we discuss the comparative impact and significance of Community-Oriented Policing (C...
Drug gangs and organized criminal groups rarely evolve into structured authorities governing their r...
This thesis examines the potential impact of community oriented policing in Latin America through a ...
How do states regulate drug trafficking? The sale of illicit drugs generates an estimated US$870 bi...
2011 Winner of the Charles H. Levine Memorial Book Prize of the International Political Science Asso...
Organizers: Benjamin Lessing (UChicago, USA), Joana Monteiro (FGV, Brazil), and Michel Misse (UFRJ, ...
In response to a crime epidemic afflicting Latin America since the early 1990s, several countries in...
yesOver the last quarter century post-conflict and post-authoritarian transitions in Latin America h...
Organized crime and illegal economies generate multiple threats to states and societies. But althoug...
Over the past generation Latin America has experienced high levels of criminal violence associated w...
Faced with the violence, criminality and insecurity now threatening peace and democratic governance ...
Over the past two decades, the armed forces have increasingly been asked to take an active role in t...
This article aims to explain, not so much the existence of organized crime and violence in Latin Ame...
Latin America is more democratic today than in the recent past, yet in places also far more violent....
Crime increase in Latin America has occurred in parallel with a change in police policy in territori...
In this article we discuss the comparative impact and significance of Community-Oriented Policing (C...
Drug gangs and organized criminal groups rarely evolve into structured authorities governing their r...
This thesis examines the potential impact of community oriented policing in Latin America through a ...
How do states regulate drug trafficking? The sale of illicit drugs generates an estimated US$870 bi...
2011 Winner of the Charles H. Levine Memorial Book Prize of the International Political Science Asso...
Organizers: Benjamin Lessing (UChicago, USA), Joana Monteiro (FGV, Brazil), and Michel Misse (UFRJ, ...