Por John Bailey y Matthew M. Taylor, Journal of Politics in Latin America, 1, 2, 3-29.
Abstract original:
Government and organized criminal groups co-exist in uneasy
equilibrium. Criminal groups adjust their behavior as a function of their own
goals and resources in relation to inter-group cooperation and conflict, dynamic
markets, and public policies; governments adjust their behavior according
to shifting perceptions of the benefits offered, threats posed, and
strategies adopted by criminal groups. When governments attempt to control
or repress their activities, criminal groups employ various tools and
instruments that might be grouped into three categories: evasion, corruption,
and confrontation. The paper draws on recent cases from Brazil and
Mexico with respect to tactical and strategic choices by governments and
criminal groups, seeking to address three broad questions. What factors
disrupt the state-criminal group equilibrium? Under what circumstances do
disruptions produce significant levels of violence (as opposed to evasion or
corruption)? What are the implications for the quality of democracy as
criminal groups violently confront the state?
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