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Violence in Latin America and the Caribbean:Subnational Structures, Institutions, and Clientelistic Networks '17
内容
目次
Introduction: how violence varies: subnational place, identity, and embeddedness Tina Hilgers and Laura Macdonald; 1. Not killer methods: a few things we got wrong when studying violence in Latin America Jean Daudelin; 2. The clientelist bases of police violence in democratic Mexico City Markus-Michael Muller; 3. Of criminal factions, UPPs, and militias: the state of public insecurity in Rio de Janeiro Robert Gay; 4. The garrison community in Kingston: urban violence, policing, private security, and implications for national security and civil rights in Jamaica Yonique Campbell and Colin Clarke; 5. The Salvadorian gang truce (2012-2014): insights on subnational security governance in El Salvador Gaelle Rivard Piche; 6. Guns and butter: social policy, semi-clientelism, and efforts to reduce violence in Mexico City Lucy Luccisano and Laura Macdonald; 7. Subnational authoritarianism and democratization in Columbia: divergent paths in Cesar and Magdalena Kent Eaton and Juan Diego Prieto; 8. Agricultural boom, subnational Mmobilization, and variation in Argentina Pablo Lapegna; 9. Patterns of violence and the dead ends of democratization in subnational Argentina Hugues Fournier; 10. Clientelism and state violence in subnational democratic consolidation in Bahia, Brazil Julian Durazo Herrmann; Conclusion: learning from subnational violence Tina Hilgers and Laura Macdonald.
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