Vigilantism and the State in Modern Latin America: Essays on Extralegal Violence
By (Author) Martha D. Huggins
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
8th November 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Terrorism, armed struggle
322.42098
Hardback
280
According to the Latin American political analysts and scholars who contributed to this volume, free elections during the 1980s largely served to disguise rather than diminish institutional repressiveness and the reality of economic, political, and social disintegration that is occurring in many Latin American countries. This book deals with the violence - on the part of both states and citizens - that is the most visible expression of that breakdown. Describing the nature and causes of Latin American vigilantism, the authors explore its impact within the larger sociopolitical system and the relationship between vigilantism and political transition. Part 1 is devoted to citizen violence, including mob lynchings; the work of the justiceiros (self-appointed or privately employed "enforcers"); and citizen uprisings against the police. Part 2 is a discussion of death squads in Peru, Guatemala, and Colombia and their use by the state to achieve specific social or political objectives. Part 3 explores the debate over violence, legislative solutions, and national security. The final section examines on-duty extra-legal police violence in several countries and the contribution of US police training to state-supported terror. The authors' analyses indicate that vigilantism results from and at the same time fosters authoritarian state structures whose economic dependence on foreign powers deepens the cycle of poverty, repression and violence. An important source of data and analysis on a largely neglected topic, this work will be of interest to a general audience concerned with human rights, to policymakers and their critics, and to scholars in the fields of criminology, comparative justice and Latin American studies.
MARTHA K. HUGGINS is Roger Thayer Stone Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at Union College, Schenectady, New York. Her publications include From Slavery to Vagrancy in Brazil and articles and papers on crime, violence, and social policy.