Conventional policy and academic discourses have generally held illicit drug economies in Latin America to be synergistic with violence and instability. The case of post-transition Bolivia (1982–1993) confounds such assumptions. Applying a political economy approach, this article moves beyond mainstream analyses to examine how the Bolivian drug trade became interwoven with informal forms of governance, order and political transition. I argue that state–narco networks – a hangover from Bolivia’s authoritarian era – played an important role in these complex processes. In tracing the evolution of these interactions, the article advances a more nuanced theorisation of the relationship between the state and the drug trade in an understudied case
The analysis focuses on the influence of illegal economies on local order and questions the conventi...
With the demise of the Colombian cartels in the late 1980s, a new business paradigm has emerged in C...
How do states regulate drug trafficking? The sale of illicit drugs generates an estimated US$870 bi...
This thesis examines the development of state-narco networks in post-transition Bolivia. Mainstream ...
The implementation of President George H. W. Bush's 1989 Andean Initiative brought to the fore compe...
International drug trafficking looms large in the future of international relations. Although drug p...
The illegal drug trade has presented numerous challenges for many regions around the globe but none ...
Bolivia\u27s sad and turbulent history continues to repeat itself. The coca boom of today has replac...
The analysis focuses on the influence of illegal economies on local order and questions the conventi...
The analysis focuses on the influence of illegal economies on local order and questions the conventi...
For three decades, the U.S. has attempted to impose a neoliberal economic model of free markets, tra...
In Bolivia’s Chapare coca growing region, the union structure (sindicato) is the cornerstone of soci...
For over two decades the US has funded repressive forced coca eradication in Peru, Colombia and Boli...
This article breaks new conceptual ground by questioning orthodox interpretations of nation state ag...
For over two decades the US has funded repressive forced coca eradication in Peru, Colombia and Boli...
The analysis focuses on the influence of illegal economies on local order and questions the conventi...
With the demise of the Colombian cartels in the late 1980s, a new business paradigm has emerged in C...
How do states regulate drug trafficking? The sale of illicit drugs generates an estimated US$870 bi...
This thesis examines the development of state-narco networks in post-transition Bolivia. Mainstream ...
The implementation of President George H. W. Bush's 1989 Andean Initiative brought to the fore compe...
International drug trafficking looms large in the future of international relations. Although drug p...
The illegal drug trade has presented numerous challenges for many regions around the globe but none ...
Bolivia\u27s sad and turbulent history continues to repeat itself. The coca boom of today has replac...
The analysis focuses on the influence of illegal economies on local order and questions the conventi...
The analysis focuses on the influence of illegal economies on local order and questions the conventi...
For three decades, the U.S. has attempted to impose a neoliberal economic model of free markets, tra...
In Bolivia’s Chapare coca growing region, the union structure (sindicato) is the cornerstone of soci...
For over two decades the US has funded repressive forced coca eradication in Peru, Colombia and Boli...
This article breaks new conceptual ground by questioning orthodox interpretations of nation state ag...
For over two decades the US has funded repressive forced coca eradication in Peru, Colombia and Boli...
The analysis focuses on the influence of illegal economies on local order and questions the conventi...
With the demise of the Colombian cartels in the late 1980s, a new business paradigm has emerged in C...
How do states regulate drug trafficking? The sale of illicit drugs generates an estimated US$870 bi...