Violence in Latin America and the Caribbean Violence in Latin America and the Caribbean

Violence in Latin America and the Caribbean

Subnational Structures, Institutions, and Clientelistic Networks

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Publisher Description

Violence in Latin America and the Caribbean is no longer perpetrated primarily by states against their citizens, but by a variety of state and non-state actors struggling to control resources, territories, and populations. This book examines violence at the subnational level to illuminate how practices of violence are embedded within subnational configurations of space and clientelistic networks. In societies shaped by centuries of violence and exclusion, inequality and marginalization prevail at the same time that democratization and neoliberalism have decentralized power to regional and local levels, where democratic and authoritarian practices coexist. Within subnational arenas, unique configurations - of historical legacies, economic structures, identities, institutions, actors, and clientelistic networks - result in particular patterns of violence and vulnerability that are often strikingly different from what is portrayed by aggregate national-level statistics. The chapters of this book examine critical cases from across the region, drawing on new primary data collected in the field to analyze how a range of political actors and institutions shape people's lives and to connect structural and physical forms of violence.

GENRE
Politics & Current Events
RELEASED
2017
September 14
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
481
Pages
PUBLISHER
Cambridge University Press
SELLER
Cambridge University Press
SIZE
6.3
MB