Courts Under Constraints: Judges, Generals and Presidents in Argentina (review)
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 2, S. 194-197
ISSN: 1548-2456
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In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 2, S. 194-197
ISSN: 1548-2456
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 3, S. iii-iv
ISSN: 1548-2456
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 4, S. 209-211
ISSN: 1548-2456
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 2, S. 198-201
ISSN: 1548-2456
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 4, S. 184-187
ISSN: 1548-2456
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 1, S. 195-200
ISSN: 1548-2456
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 2, S. 171-180
ISSN: 1548-2456
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 2, S. 95-116
ISSN: 1548-2456
AbstractThe strengthening of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) during the 1990s was an unintended consequence of a series of tactical successes in U.S. antidrug policies. These included dismantling the Medellín and Cali drug cartels, interdicting coca coming into Colombian processing facilities, and using drug certification requirements to pressure the Colombian government to attack drug cartels and allow aerial fumigation of coca crops. These successes, however, merely pushed coca cultivation increasingly to FARC-dominated areas while weakening many of the FARC's political-military opponents. This provided the FARC with unprecedented opportunities to extract resources from the cocaine industry to deepen its long insurgency against the Colombian state. The Colombian experience demonstrates the importance of creating a more sophisticated understanding of how lootable wealth can exacerbate civil wars.
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 4, S. iii-iv
ISSN: 1548-2456
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 1, S. 143-174
ISSN: 1548-2456
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 2, S. 141-169
ISSN: 1548-2456
AbstractThis article uses empirical evidence from Nicaragua to examine Guillermo O'Donnell's argument that new democracies often become undemocratic delegative democracies and that vertical accountability is not enough to stop such encroaching authoritarianism. While events in the last five years have focused attention on illegal executive behavior by former president Alemán, Nicaragua's democracy actually has experienced authoritarian presidencies under all the major parties. Elections and popular mobilization have strengthened the independence of the legislature, however. Mechanisms of vertical accountability thereby have proven more effective than expected in restraining executive authoritarianism and fostering institutions of horizontal accountability. The case of Nicaragua shows that citizens can use the power balance and separate institutional mandate of presidential democracy to limit authoritarianism.
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 4, S. 53-81
ISSN: 1548-2456
AbstractThis article examines the politics of how drug traffickers resolve disputes and maintain order in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro. Much popular discourse and some scholarly studies argue that drug traffickers play a major role in controlling crime and minimizing conflicts there. This article shows that traffickers enforce community norms under a variable political calculus in which well-connected and respected residents are less likely to be punished for rule violations than are individuals who are marginal to the life of the community. This allows many favela residents who conform to local norms to feel a degree of control over their own safety, a "myth of personal security" in otherwise violent neighborhoods.
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 1, S. 117-141
ISSN: 1548-2456
AbstractThis article argues that the increased participation of women in Peruvian politics in the 1990s and the advances made in some areas of their citizenship rights are connected to the strategies put in place by some sectors of the women's movement and to the openings provided by the Fujimori regime. Some of the impact of neopopulist rule on political institutions is shown to be positively related to women's increased opportunities during this period; yet the weak rule of law and the political use of the women's agenda by an increasingly questionable regime placed the women's movement in a complex political panorama. A disaggregated analysis of the politics of women's citizenship reveals that women from the popular sectors did not benefit from the same progress in their rights claims as women from the feminist movement or women in party politics.
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 1, S. 55-86
ISSN: 1548-2456
AbstractThis article asks whether democratization, under certain historical conditions, may relate to the deteriorating rule of law. Focusing on Mexico City, where police corruption is significant, this study argues that the institutionalized legacies of police power inherited from Mexico's one-party system have severely constrained its newly democratic state's efforts to reform the police. Mexico's democratic transition has created an environment of partisan competition that, combined with decentralization of the state and fragmentation of its coercive and administrative apparatus, exacerbates intrastate and bureaucratic conflicts. These factors prevent the government from reforming the police sufficiently to guarantee public security and earn citizen trust, even as the same factors reduce capacity, legitimacy, and citizen confidence in both the police and the democratically elected state. This article suggests that when democracy serves to undermine rather than strengthen the rule of law, more democracy can actually diminish democracy and its quality.
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 48, Heft 4, S. 205-207
ISSN: 1548-2456