Lexington Books
Pages: 166
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-3560-1 • Hardback • July 2016 • $103.00 • (£79.00)
978-1-4985-3562-5 • Paperback • March 2018 • $53.99 • (£42.00)
978-1-4985-3561-8 • eBook • July 2016 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Jonathan D. Rosen is a research scientist at Florida International University’s Jack D. Gordon Institute for Public Policy.
Roberto Zepeda is a researcher at the Centro de Investigaciones sobre América del Norte at the Universidad Autónoma de México.
- Introduction: Historical Context and Influential Factors
- Felipe Calderón’s War on Drugs: an Examination of the Counternacrotics Strategies
- The Bloodbath: the Results of the Drug War during the Calderón Administration
- The Enrique Peña Nieto Government: Drug War Strategies and Their Consequences
- Failed States within Mexico: Problematic Zones for the Peña Nieto Government
- Organized Crime and the Prison System: Hell on Earth
- Reforms, Challenges, and Policy Proposals
The most comprehensive book on Mexico’s contemporary security challenges and possible policy available. A wealth of information simplified into a brilliantly written work of scholarship. A must read.
— Hanna Samir Kassab, Northern Michigan University
Organized Crime, Drug Trafficking, and Violence is an excellent synthesis of the evaluation of organized crime related to drug trafficking and the war that President Calderón declared in 2006. The result was a significant increase in violence. Six years after the change in government Enrique Peña Nieto came to power and decided to try to change the strategy without success. The authors argue that within Mexico there are some states, in fact, that are failed states because the government’s efforts to dismantle the drug cartels were not successful. The book is an excellent analysis for better understanding 10 years in which Mexico has applied the strategy of the war on drugs.
— Raúl Benitez-Manaut, Center for Research on North America (UNAM)