Why do drug cartels fight states? Episodes of armed conflict between drug cartels and states in Colombia, Brazil and Mexico have demonstrated that `criminal wars' can be just as destructive as civil wars. Yet insurgents in civil wars stand a reasonable chance of winning formal concessions of territory or outright victory. Why fight the state if, like drug cartels, you seek neither to topple nor secede from it?Equally puzzling are the divergent effects of state crackdowns. Mexico's militarized crackdown in 2006 was intended to quickly break up the cartels and curtail incipient inter-cartel and anti-state violence; five years later, splintered cartels are an order of magnitude more violent, with over 16,000 homicides and 600 of attacks on arm...
The general understanding of Mexico's drug war has tended toward simplistic, particularly in our ass...
Until the 1980s, Mexico enjoyed relative freedom from violence. Ruthless drug cartels existed, but t...
Government and organized criminal groups co-exist in uneasy equilibrium. Criminal groups adjust thei...
This article explains a surprising wave of lethal attacks by drug cartels against hundreds of local ...
Given the insecurity that the Mexican state and millions of people face at the hands of drug traffic...
Transnational organized crime is a pressing global security issue. Mexico is currently embroiled in ...
This paper seeks to move beyond the general base-level of violence that is regularly present in cart...
This article examines the categorisation and definition of the drug-linked violence which has affect...
Why is there variation in how violent nonstate groups interact in armed conflict? Where armed confli...
How do states regulate drug trafficking? The sale of illicit drugs generates an estimated US$870 bi...
Illegality does not necessarily breed violence. The relationship between illicit markets and violenc...
The struggle between the Mexican government and Mexican drug cartels has\ud reached a critical point...
The ‘war on drugs’ has been a staple issue of US-Latin American relations over the past five decades...
Why do drug trafficking organizations (DTOs) sometimes prey on the communities in which they operate...
Latin America is a region that has gone through and is still going through a lot of violent conflict...
The general understanding of Mexico's drug war has tended toward simplistic, particularly in our ass...
Until the 1980s, Mexico enjoyed relative freedom from violence. Ruthless drug cartels existed, but t...
Government and organized criminal groups co-exist in uneasy equilibrium. Criminal groups adjust thei...
This article explains a surprising wave of lethal attacks by drug cartels against hundreds of local ...
Given the insecurity that the Mexican state and millions of people face at the hands of drug traffic...
Transnational organized crime is a pressing global security issue. Mexico is currently embroiled in ...
This paper seeks to move beyond the general base-level of violence that is regularly present in cart...
This article examines the categorisation and definition of the drug-linked violence which has affect...
Why is there variation in how violent nonstate groups interact in armed conflict? Where armed confli...
How do states regulate drug trafficking? The sale of illicit drugs generates an estimated US$870 bi...
Illegality does not necessarily breed violence. The relationship between illicit markets and violenc...
The struggle between the Mexican government and Mexican drug cartels has\ud reached a critical point...
The ‘war on drugs’ has been a staple issue of US-Latin American relations over the past five decades...
Why do drug trafficking organizations (DTOs) sometimes prey on the communities in which they operate...
Latin America is a region that has gone through and is still going through a lot of violent conflict...
The general understanding of Mexico's drug war has tended toward simplistic, particularly in our ass...
Until the 1980s, Mexico enjoyed relative freedom from violence. Ruthless drug cartels existed, but t...
Government and organized criminal groups co-exist in uneasy equilibrium. Criminal groups adjust thei...