Dark Web Drug Markets and Cartel Crime

IF 0.4 Q3 LAW
Brian Meehan, Nicholas Farmer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract Recent evidence suggests that legal marijuana markets in several U.S. states have decreased violence in Mexican-U.S. border regions. As legal markets for production and distribution displace drug cartel distribution, the violence associated with cartel trafficking and distribution decreases. Prior analysis has not considered an important emerging innovation for drug distribution: online anonymous marketplaces. The increasing volume of drug trade that has occurred on this “Dark Web” could result in reduced drug cartel violence as production and distribution use this substitute network and turn away from the cartel distribution networks. This paper investigates the relationship between border violence and the volume of drug trade that occurs on the Dark Web using a difference in differences model. We examine differences in crime rates at the U.S.-Mexico border and away from the border during the emergence of the Dark Web. Data on Dark Web transactions, users, and markets allows us to measure changes in Dark Web activity and the subsequent impact on crime. We find evidence that the rise in Dark Web marketplaces results in crime reductions at the border of the U.S., relative to non-border counties.
暗网毒品市场和贩毒集团犯罪
最近的证据表明,美国几个州的合法大麻市场减少了美墨之间的暴力事件。边境地区。由于生产和分销的合法市场取代了贩毒集团的分销,与贩毒集团贩运和分销有关的暴力减少了。先前的分析没有考虑到药物分销的一个重要的新兴创新:在线匿名市场。在这个“暗网”上发生的毒品交易量的增加可能会导致毒品卡特尔暴力的减少,因为生产和分销使用这个替代网络,而不是卡特尔分销网络。本文使用差异中的差异模型研究了边境暴力与暗网上发生的毒品交易量之间的关系。我们研究了暗网出现期间美墨边境和边境外犯罪率的差异。暗网交易、用户和市场的数据使我们能够衡量暗网活动的变化以及对犯罪的后续影响。我们发现有证据表明,暗网市场的兴起导致美国边境地区的犯罪率相对于非边境地区有所下降。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
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