This book provides unprecedented ethnographic access inside the governance practices of Rio de Janeiro's drug trafficking gangs.
This book investigates the governance practices of Rio de Janeiro's drug trafficking gangs. Based on three years of ethnographic research, it offers unprecedented documentation of the evolution of three rival gang organizations from the 1970s to the present.
This book provides unprecedented ethnographic access inside the governance practices of Rio de Janeiro's drug trafficking gangs.
This book investigates the governance practices of Rio de Janeiro's drug trafficking gangs. Based on three years of ethnographic research, it offers unprecedented documentation of the evolution of three rival gang organizations from the 1970s to the present.
For over four decades, drug trafficking gangs have monopolized violence and engaged in various forms of governance across hundreds of informal neighborhoods known as favelas in Rio de Janeiro. Drawing on three years of ethnographic fieldwork, over 200 interviews with gang members and residents, 400 archival documents, and 20,000 anonymous hotline denunciations of gang members, this book provides a comprehensive examination of the causes and consequences of these governance arrangements. The book documents the variation in gang-resident relationships – from responsive relations in which gangs provide a reliable form of order and stimulate the local economy, to coercive and unresponsive relations in which gangs offers residents few benefits – then identifies the factors that account for this variation. The result is an unprecedented ethnographic study that provides readers a unique, in-depth insight into the evolution of Rio de Janeiro's drug trafficking gangs from their emergence in the 1970s to the present day.
'Inside Criminalized Governance provides key new insights into the ways that organized crime groups govern populations and territories in the world today. Building on compelling evidence, including vivid ethnographic description and analysis of spatial control, Barnes offers a nuanced model of how interactions between criminal groups, their rivals, and the police affect how many in Latin America's cities are governed.' Enrique Desmond Arias, Baruch College, CUNY
'How and why do gangs govern urban populations? Drawing on years of fascinating fieldwork in Rio de Janeiro - including ethnography, interviews, and archival research - Barnes argues that rival groups, police, and residents shape how gangs use coercion and provide benefits. This is a major conceptual, theoretical, and empirical contribution and a must-read for scholars of non-state armed governance in contemporary Latin America.' Ana Arjona, Northwestern University
'Barnes goes granular on criminalized governance to depict its roots, dynamics, and forms. This is a marvelous, insightful, and enlightening book to be reckoned with in the years to come. Hard to put it down because it takes us inside a world few dare to examine and understand.' Javier Auyero, The University of Texas, Austin
'Based on three years of ethnographic fieldwork in Rio de Janeiro, Inside Criminalized Governance brings the political nature of criminalized governance to the fore. This is, at the same time, a nuanced ethnography on how the urban margins are ordered and a theoretically driven study destined to make a significant impact on several disciplines, including sociology and criminology. I highly recommend it.' Federico Varese, University of Oxford and Sciences Po
Nicholas Barnes is a Lecturer in the School of International Relations at the University of St. Andrews. This book is based on more than three years of ethnographic fieldwork in Rio de Janeiro, 18 months of which the author spent living in Complexo da Maré, the city's largest group of informal neighborhoods. This project has benefitted from numerous grants, including from the National Science Foundation, the Department of Education through the Fulbright-Hays program, the Social Sciences Research Council, and the Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation. The dissertation on which this book is based received the Best Fieldwork award (2017) from the American Political Science Association and the Best Dissertation award (2018) from the Society for Institutional and Organizational Economics.
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