From business to war: Causes of transitional violence by the Mexican drug cartels

Bettina Schorr
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

From business to war: Although illicit markets are generally peaceful, at times they burst into massive transitional violence. One example for such an upsurge in violence is Mexico where the drug cartels are engaged in a bloody war. The Mexican case reveals that two interrelated factors can incite transitional illegal violence. First, market changes that close or open up business opportunities can lead to violent criminal competition. Second, political changes can cause or increase criminal violence. When collusive state-crime relations erode and the state increases law enforcement against criminal groups, they are likely to fight back. Both factors are tightly connected: criminal competition may erode protection rackets and incite harsher law enforcement. Law enforcement in turn may lead to the fragmentation of crime groups and cause more violent competition. Massive criminal violence is fed by further factors such as the easy availability of both weapons and specialists in violence and the displacement effect of intensive law enforcement in regions characterized by weak state structures.
从商业到战争:墨西哥贩毒集团过渡暴力的原因
从商业到战争:尽管非法市场通常是和平的,但有时它们会爆发大规模的过渡暴力。暴力事件激增的一个例子是墨西哥,那里的贩毒集团卷入了一场血腥的战争。墨西哥的案例表明,两个相互关联的因素可以引发过渡时期的非法暴力。首先,关闭或开放商业机会的市场变化可能导致暴力犯罪竞争。其次,政治变化可能导致或增加犯罪暴力。当国家与犯罪集团的勾结关系被削弱,国家加大对犯罪集团的执法力度时,他们可能会反击。这两个因素是紧密联系在一起的:犯罪竞争可能侵蚀保护网,并煽动更严厉的执法。执法反过来可能导致犯罪集团的分裂,并导致更多的暴力竞争。进一步的因素助长了大规模的犯罪暴力,例如武器和暴力专家的容易获得,以及在国家结构薄弱的地区加强执法造成的流离失所效应。
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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