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E-raamat: Criminalization of States: The Relationship between States and Organized Crime

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This volume examines the relationship between states and organized crime. It seeks to add to the theoretical literature for analyzing the criminalization of the state. The volume also explores the nature of organized crime in countries throughout the Americas from Central America to the Southern Cone.

Arvustused

With Latin America experiencing the highest rates of crime and violence in the world, this volume could not be more timely and important. It brings together some of the smartest thinkers in the region, from Mexico to the southern cone. The volume will be especially essential for anyone wishing to stay up to date on the rapidly changing and enormously complex criminal landscape in the Americas that goes well beyond the familiar terrain of drug trafficking and drug violence. -- Peter Andreas, Brown University

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction 1(14)
Bruce Bagley
Amanda M. Gurecki
Jonathan D. Rosen
Jorge Chabat
1 Criminally Possessed States: A Theoretical Approach
15(16)
Jorge Chabat
2 Organized Crime in Mexico: State Fragility, "Criminal Enclaves," and a Violent Disequilibrium
31(24)
Nathan P. Jones
3 The Dimensions of Violence in Mexico
55(26)
Roberto Zepeda
Jonathan D. Rosen
4 Combating Organized Crime, Violence, and Public Insecurity in Mexico: The Case of Tijuana
81(26)
David Rocha
Roberto Zepeda
Jonathan D. Rosen
5 The Collapse of Mexico's Police and the Militarization of Public Security
107(20)
Sigrid Arzt
6 At a Crossroads: Can Guatemala Prevail in the Fight against Violence?
127(22)
Adriana Beltran
7 Chronic Violence, Organized Crime, and the State in El Salvador
149(20)
Christine J. Wade
8 Green Crime: The Environmental Links between States and Organized Crime
169(20)
Mark Ungar
9 Organized Crime and the State in Venezuela under Chavismo
189(20)
John Polga-Hecimovich
10 Making Sense of Colombia's "Post-Conflict" Conflict
209(20)
Adam Isacson
11 Colombia after the FARC
229(12)
Victor J. Hinojosa
12 The Colombian Peace Accord: Historic Achievement, Daunting Obstacles
241(14)
Bruce Bagley
Jonathan D. Rosen
13 Corruption in Colombia
255(26)
Fernando Cepeda Ulloa
14 How the State Determines Illegal Drugs and Organized Crime: The Case of Ecuador
281(18)
Nashira Chavez
Pryanka Penafiel
15 Coca, Organized Crime, and (Non-)Violence in Bolivia
299(24)
Marten W. Brienen
16 Organized Crime and the State in Brazil
323(18)
Michael Jerome Wolff
17 Organized Crime in Argentina: The Politics of Laissez-Faire
341(20)
Sebastian Antonino Cutrona
Conclusion 361(6)
Bruce Bagley
Jorge Chabat
Amanda M. Gurecki
Jonathan D. Rosen
Selected Bibliography 367(2)
Index 369(6)
About the Contributors 375
Jonathan D. Rosen is assistant professor of criminal justice at Holy Family University.

Bruce Bagley holds a PhD in political science from the University of California, Los Angeles.

Jorge Chabat is professor in the Department of Pacific Studies at the University of Guadalajara.