Uneven Landscapes of Violence: Geographies of Law and Accumulation in Mexico
In contrast to analyses that view systemic violence in Mexico as simply the result of drugs and criminality, a deviation of a well-functioning market economy and/or a failing and corrupt state, Muñoz Martínez argues in Uneven Landscapes of Violence that the nexus of criminality, illegality and violence is integral to neoliberal state formation. She argues that it was through this nexus that dispossession took place after 2000 in the form of forced displacement, extortion and private appropriation of public funds along with widespread violence by state forces and criminal groups. Further, she explores the manner in which the neoliberal emphasis on the rule of law to protect private property and contracts further reshaped the boundaries between legality and illegality, concealing the criminal and violent origins of economic gain.

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Uneven Landscapes of Violence: Geographies of Law and Accumulation in Mexico
In contrast to analyses that view systemic violence in Mexico as simply the result of drugs and criminality, a deviation of a well-functioning market economy and/or a failing and corrupt state, Muñoz Martínez argues in Uneven Landscapes of Violence that the nexus of criminality, illegality and violence is integral to neoliberal state formation. She argues that it was through this nexus that dispossession took place after 2000 in the form of forced displacement, extortion and private appropriation of public funds along with widespread violence by state forces and criminal groups. Further, she explores the manner in which the neoliberal emphasis on the rule of law to protect private property and contracts further reshaped the boundaries between legality and illegality, concealing the criminal and violent origins of economic gain.

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Uneven Landscapes of Violence: Geographies of Law and Accumulation in Mexico

Uneven Landscapes of Violence: Geographies of Law and Accumulation in Mexico

by Hepzibah Muñoz Martínez
Uneven Landscapes of Violence: Geographies of Law and Accumulation in Mexico

Uneven Landscapes of Violence: Geographies of Law and Accumulation in Mexico

by Hepzibah Muñoz Martínez

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Overview

In contrast to analyses that view systemic violence in Mexico as simply the result of drugs and criminality, a deviation of a well-functioning market economy and/or a failing and corrupt state, Muñoz Martínez argues in Uneven Landscapes of Violence that the nexus of criminality, illegality and violence is integral to neoliberal state formation. She argues that it was through this nexus that dispossession took place after 2000 in the form of forced displacement, extortion and private appropriation of public funds along with widespread violence by state forces and criminal groups. Further, she explores the manner in which the neoliberal emphasis on the rule of law to protect private property and contracts further reshaped the boundaries between legality and illegality, concealing the criminal and violent origins of economic gain.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781642596144
Publisher: Haymarket Books
Publication date: 12/23/2021
Series: Studies in Critical Social Sciences
Pages: 186
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Hepzibah Muñoz Martínez, Ph.D. (2008), York University, is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of New Brunswick. She has published several peer-reviewed articles on Mexico’s political economy and violence including 'Criminal Violence and Social Control' in NACLA 47, 2014.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

List of Maps and Images



1 Introduction: Violent State Formation and Accumulation in Mexico

 1  Locating Criminality, Illegality and Violence in Mexico

 2  Violence, Criminal Groups, and the State

 3  Violent Spatialities of State Formation and Uneven Development

 4  Lived Experience as Fieldwork

 5  Structure of the Book



2 Economies and Politics of (Il)Legality, 1950–2012

 1  Law, Order, and Uneven Development under ISI

 2  Neoliberal Prohibitions and Transgressions after 1980

 3  Governance, Neoliberal Consolidation, and Ambiguity after 2000

 4  Conclusion



3 The (Il)Legal Space of Global Trade and Finance

 1  (Il)Legal Dispossession

 2  Uneven Development, Finance, and Money Laundering

 3  Law and Geographies of Power

 4  Conclusion



4 Urban (Dis)Orders

 1  The Politics of Silence and the Routinization of Fear

 2  Spaces of (Il)Legality and Landscapes of Fear

 3  Undemocratic Infrastructure

 4  Conclusion



5 Uneven Development and Politics of (In)Difference

 1  Unevenness and the Production of (In)Difference

 2  State Power, Criminal Groups and Accumulation through the ‘Illegal’ Other

 3  Conclusion



6 Social Space, Law, and Everyday Forms of Resistance

 1  Streets of Hope

 2  Places of Terror and Human Rights as Labor Rights

 3  Structured Coherence, Collective Bargaining and Transcripts of Labor

 4  Conclusion



7 Conclusion: Geographies of State, Accumulation, and the Law



References

Index
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