The Architecture of Drug Trafficking: Network Forms of Organisation in the Colombian Cocaine Trade
Michael Kenney
Global Crime, 2007, vol. 8, issue 3, 233-259
Abstract:
For much of the past twenty-five years, the US-led war on drugs has been premised on a fundamental misunderstanding of Colombian drug trade. Instead of being run by a handful of massive, price-fixing ‘cartels’, the Colombian drug trade, then and now, was characterized by a fluid social system where flexible exchange networks expanded and retracted according to market opportunities and regulatory constraints. To support this interpretation, I draw on primary and secondary source data I collected in Colombia and the US, including interviews with several dozen hard-to-reach informants. I analyze these data to analyze the organisational form and functioning of ‘Colombian’ trafficking networks, focusing on how these illicit enterprises communicate, coordinate their activities, and make decisions, with an eye towards deflating some of the more persistent myths that have grown up around these transnational enterprises.
Date: 2007
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:taf:fglcxx:v:8:y:2007:i:3:p:233-259
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DOI: 10.1080/17440570701507794
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