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Authoritarian Recall: Mexico's Drug War and Subnational Patterns of Opposition to Democracy
[journal article]
Abstract
In times of crisis, citizens' support for democracy can depend on how well they think their democracy can address that crisis compared to authoritarian alternatives. Mexico is in the midst of just such a crisis, as its war on drug trafficking organisations has brought an unprecedented rise in violen... view more
In times of crisis, citizens' support for democracy can depend on how well they think their democracy can address that crisis compared to authoritarian alternatives. Mexico is in the midst of just such a crisis, as its war on drug trafficking organisations has brought an unprecedented rise in violence and, in some areas, posed a direct challenge to the state's capacity to govern. At the same time, its subnational political landscape ranges from vibrant, multi-party states to those with continued connections to a dominant one-party past. We leverage these variations in subnational political context and levels of drug-related violence to examine how the subnational political context mediates the relationship between a crisis and support for non-democratic alternatives. When faced with a violent shock to the system, public attitudes towards democracy depend in part on one's experiences with non-democratic alternatives and whether these authoritarian options appear to solve the crisis at hand more effectively.... view less
Keywords
Mexico; drug-related crime; violence; democratization; political attitude; public opinion; political system; authoritarian system; Latin America
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Criminal Sociology, Sociology of Law
Free Keywords
subnational politics; drug trafficking organisations; 2010 Encuesta Nacional de Valores (ENVUD)
Document language
English
Publication Year
2020
Page/Pages
p. 3-31
Journal
Journal of Politics in Latin America, 12 (2020) 1
ISSN
1868-4890
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0