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Citizens Against Crime and Violence

Iran Guerrero

Societal Responses in Mexico

Barcode 9781978827646
Hardback

Original price £129.38 - Original price £129.38
Original price
£129.38
£129.38 - £129.38
Current price £129.38

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Release Date: 17/06/2022

Genre: Society & Culture
Sub-Genre: Criminology
Label: Rutgers University Press
Contributors: Trevor Stack (Edited by), Iran Guerrero (Contributions by), Pilar Domingo (Contributions by), Denisse Román (Contributions by), Trevor Stack (Contributions by), Edgar Guerra (Contributions by), Salvador Maldonado (Contributions by), Sasha Jesperson (Contributions by), Ariadna Sánchez (Contributions by), Irene Álvarez (Contributions by), Catherine Whittaker (Contributions by)
Language: English
Publisher: Rutgers University Press

Societal Responses in Mexico
Mexico has become notorious for crime-related violence, and the efforts of governments and national and international NGOs to counter this violence have proven largely futile. Citizens against Crime and Violence studies societal responses to crime and violence within one of Mexico’s most affected regions, the state of Michoacan.
Mexico has become notorious for crime-related violence, and the efforts of governments and national and international NGOs to counter this violence have proven largely futile. Citizens against Crime and Violence studies societal responses to crime and violence within one of Mexico’s most affected regions, the state of Michoacán. Based on comparative ethnography conducted over twelve months by a team of anthropologists and sociologists across six localities of Michoacán, ranging from the most rural to the most urban, the contributors consider five varieties of societal responses: local citizen security councils that define security and attempt to influence its policing, including by self-defense groups; cultural activists looking to create safe 'cultural' fields from which to transform their social environment; organizations in the state capital that combine legal and political strategies against less visible violence (forced disappearance, gender violence, anti-LGBT); church-linked initiatives bringing to bear the church’s institutionality, including to denounce 'state capture'; and women’s organizations creating 'safe' networks allowing to influence violence prevention.