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Understanding Mexico’s Drug Violence

David Shirk and Joel Wallman

Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2015, vol. 59, issue 8, 1348-1376

Abstract: A dramatic increase in criminal violence in Mexico since 2007 has resulted in an estimated 60,000–70,000 “additional†homicides, often of an especially brutal form, related to drug trafficking and other organized-crime activities. This violence has been accompanied by a steep increase in rates of kidnapping and extortion and has targeted participants in the narcotics trade as well as government officials, journalists, and civil society activists. Despite the magnitude of the violence and enormous public concern about it, scholarly literature on this topic has been scant. This issue offers some of the most promising analyses conducted thus far on the trends in violence and their causes, focusing largely, though not exclusively, on the role Mexico’s government has played in the business of illegal drugs and the violence that accompanies it. In this introduction, we discuss the challenge of deriving reliable statistics on drug-related violence, its spatial and temporal patterns, prevailing explanations, its relationship to organized crime in general, and differences between this violence and substate political violence.

Keywords: civilian casualties; democratization; use of force; conflict; militarized disputes (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (4)

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