Arias Goldstein Violent Democracies Draft PDF
Arias Goldstein Violent Democracies Draft PDF
Arias Goldstein Violent Democracies Draft PDF
Enrique Desmond Arias (John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Graduate Center, CUNY)
and
Reactions to the 2005 election of Evo Morales as president of Bolivia were in many ways
indicative of the complex and often contradictory understandings of “democracy” extant in Latin
America today. For many of Morales’ supporters, in Bolivia and around the world, the election
of Bolivia’s “first indigenous president” was celebrated as a triumph for the historically
exclusion through the ballot box. In their often tearful inaugural addresses and in subsequent
speeches, Morales and his vice president, Alvaro García Linera, spoke of the need to create a
government that would work against corruption and the privileging of an elite few, and toward a
broader social inclusion for poor and indigenous Bolivians. Advocating for a “strong state” that
would work to transform poverty, nationalize natural resources (specifically hydrocarbons), and
combat transnational policies of neoliberal economics and the war on drugs, García Linera used
the language of multicultural democracy to call for a state in which “different peoples, different
languages, different colors are all valued equally, a pollera [dress typical of indigenous Bolivian
women] is the same as a skirt, a poncho the same as a tie, lighter skin color the same as darker
skin” (Los Tiempos 2006). The prevailing public sentiment, in the newspapers and on the streets
of Bolivia’s cities, was one of profound optimism, an almost unprecedented sense of confidence
in the democratic process, and a cross-class and cross-party willingness to let the new MAS
(Movement Toward Socialism) government succeed in its stated goals of expanding the rights
For other observers holding different conceptions of democracy, the election of Evo
Morales rather represented what one columnist called “The End of Bolivia.” In a bulletin written
for the Foreign Policy Research Institute, Michael Radu (2005), co-chairman of the Institute’s
Center on Terrorism, Counter-Terrorism, and Homeland Security, reflected the opinion of many
U.S. observers when he described Bolivia as “a black hole in the heart of South America.” Radu
considered Morales’ and García Linera’s calls for multicultural citizenship and greater inclusion
of indigenous peoples in the political and economic life of Bolivian society to be “racism,” and
described MAS’ 53.74% share of the electoral vote (compared with the 28.59% of his nearest
rival) as only a “slight majority.” Radu also blamed Morales personally for the social
movements that drove from power the previous “democratically elected” president, Gonzalo
Sanchez de Lozada, who fled Bolivia following the state’s massacre of more than 50 people in
the 2003 “Gas War.” “So much for the Bolivians’ thirst for democracy,” he quipped. Radu
concluded by calling for a strong U.S. policy response to Morales’ “dubious election.”
As the divergent reactions to this election indicate, the meaning of “democracy” in Latin
America (and indeed, around the world) is today the subject of some contestation. In many ways,
1 This optimism and the political unanimity that seemed to accompany it turned out to be short-lived, as
longstanding divisions within Bolivia society reasserted themselves over the next few years, leading to violent
clashes between groups supporting the MAS government and those backing “traditional” parties from the lowland
regions seeking more autonomy from the central state.
the label of “democracy” is itself of questionable merit in analyzing the quality of political
democracy – including the existence of a rule of law, sociopolitical inclusion, and public fairness
and transparency – in contemporary Latin American nations. Indeed, if one considers violence to
democratic institutions and values – then Latin American democracies could be said to be
profoundly undemocratic. As recent research has shown, some nations that have been formally
democratic for the last 20 or 30 years nevertheless demonstrate many qualities that fall far short
of the democratic ideal, including high levels of state and interpersonal violence. The Gas War in
Bolivia, mentioned above, is not the only such case. In São Paulo, Brazil, for example, more
people are killed by police every couple of years than the military dictatorship killed during its
entire twenty year reign.2 Extrajudicial killings of criminal suspects (lynchings) are becoming
endemic in nations from Mexico, to Guatemala, to Bolivia. 3 Likewise, criminal, political and
domestic violence is widespread in such countries as Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela. 4 And,
as is now apparent in Bolivia, violence between groups defined along lines of race, social class,
region, and political affiliation remains a potent force in Latin American society, despite the
existence of democratic elections and the expanding electoral participation of formerly excluded
populations.
democratic behavior has driven scholarship by political scientists studying Latin American for
2 For statistics on murders in São Paulo see Daniel Brinks, “Informal Institutions and the Rule of Law: The Judicial
Response to State Killings in Buenos Aires and São Paulo in the 1990s,” Comparative Politics 36 no. 1 2002, pp. 6-
7.
3 D. M. Goldstein, “In Our Own Hands: Lynching, Justice and the Law in Bolivia,” American Ethnologist 30 no. 1
(2003), 22-43; D. M. Goldstein, “Flexible Justice: Neoliberal Violence and Self-Help Security in Bolivia,” Critique
of Anthropology 25 (2005), 389-411; Angelina Snodgrass Godoy, Popular Injustice: Violence, Community, and Law
in Latin America, (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2005).
4 For statistics on violence in Latin America see M. Hinton “A Distant Reality: Democratic Policing in Argentina
and Brazil,” Criminal Justice 5 no. 1 (2005), pp. 77.
the last twenty-five years. Despite more than a generation of internal and transnational efforts to
change, improve, and westernize Latin American political systems, a consensus seems to have
emerged among scholars that while “democracy” may exist in most of the region’s republics, it is
usually far from perfect. In the generation since the return of civilian governance, degrees of
economic inequality have substantially increased and large segments of national populations
(especially poor and indigenous communities) have continued to suffer significantly from
violence, including crime, police violence, domestic abuse, and human rights violations. As a
result of this contradiction between the democratic ideal of peace and equality and the continued
characterize the differences between “democracy” in Latin America and the supposedly more
ideal forms that exist in Western Europe and the United States.5 Similarly modified forms of
“citizenship” (most influentially, O’Donnell’s “low intensity citizenship” 6) have also been
Latin America. The extended debate that has cropped up around these taxonomic questions
suggests that the democratization/consolidation paradigm that for so long has driven the study of
politics in the region is not providing the necessary descriptive or analytical tools to
For anthropologists and some other social scientists concerned with similar issues in the
region, the scholarly focus has not been on electoral patterns and the formal structures of
democratic governance, but rather on the lived experience of ordinary citizens within these
democratic or democratizing contexts. Concerned less with state typologies than with everyday
5 See John Gledhill, Power and Its Disguises: Anthropological Perspectives on Politics, Pluto (Sterling, VA), 2000.
6 G. O’Donnell, “Why the Rule of Law Matters,” Journal of Democracy 15 no. 4 (2004), pp. 42..
realities, these scholars nonetheless have also adopted the adjectival approach to political
analysis, deploying many of the same terms mentioned above or coining new ones to critique
current political regimes and the inequitable social relations they have produced. Such critiques
have largely focused on the deficiencies and inequities in the quality of citizenship and its
attendant rights available to different categories of citizens in much of Latin America. For
example, Teresa Caldeira and James Holston argue that in the absence of an effective rule of law
that guarantees full and equal protections to all, formally democratic states are revealed to lack
many of the fundamental qualities that are supposed to pertain to such states. In other words,
though political democracies senso strictu, these societies in fact remain socially and
economically undemocratic (i.e., “disjunctive”), with extreme levels of social and interpersonal
violence being the clearest indicator of democracy’s incompleteness. As citizens are unable to
secure justice through state institutions, they increasingly employ violence (e.g., vigilantism) as a
means of creating their own, extra-legal forms of “security.”7 The resulting inequality in access
to citizens’ rights reveals what Ana María Sanjuán calls “an institutional absurdity: democracies
Despite these critiques, however, political scientists and anthropologists alike do not yet
have an alternative framework within which to begin a new discussion of Latin American
politics in the context of proliferating violence. The overwhelming number of adjectives (many
citizenship in contemporary Latin America suggests the need for a more synthetic framework,
7 D.M. Goldstein, The Spectacular City: Violence and Performance in Urban Bolivia, (Durham: Duke University
Press, 2004); D.M. Goldstein, “Flexible Justice: Neoliberal Violence and Self-Help Security in Bolivia,” Critique of
Anthropology 25 (2005), pp. 389-411.
8 A.M. Sanjuán, “Democracy, Citizenship and Violence in Venezuela,” in Citizens of Fear: Urban Violence in Latin
America, Susana Rotker, ed. (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2002), pp. 87-101.
one that joins democratic state functioning more explicitly to the daily experience of citizens
within these democracies. Starting from the pervasive social violence and apparent state
breakdown that affects much of the hemisphere, in this introductory chapter we will lay out the
basis for an alternative conceptualization of politics in Latin America, one that recognizes the
plural nature of its current governing regimes but, at the same time, does not confine discussions
of violence to the failure of those regimes. Rather, we will focus on the multiple ways that the
politics of violence concretely affects lived political experience, and is fundamentally inculcated
in the production and maintenance of the “democratic transition.” We will argue that to
understand politics in Latin America today, we need to understand how violence affects political
practice and subjectivity, and how it remains an instrument for political rule and resistance
within contemporary Latin American democracies. In other words, rather than understanding
Latin America’s endemic violence as simply a failure of democratic governance and institutions,
necessary component of their maintenance, and as an instrument for popular challenges to their
legitimacy.9
plural,” with states, social elites, and subalterns employing violence in the quest to establish or
contest regimes of citizenship, justice, rights, and a democratic social order. The idea of violent
pluralism is not intended to suggest (as some interpretations of the pluralism concept imply) a
kind of basic equivalency between types of violence in the region. Latin American democracies
are not violently plural in the sense that these societies consists of a variety of groups
maintaining equal access to power and equal use of violence to achieve or maintain it. Rather,
9 D.M. Goldstein, “In Our Own Hands: Lynching, Justice and the Law in Bolivia,” American Ethnologist 30 no. 1
(2003), pp. 22-43.
what the notion of violent pluralism offers is a way to think about violence in Latin American
society as not merely concentrated in the state, or in “deviant” groups and individuals who
democracies, the maintenance of democratic states, and the political behavior of democratic
citizens. In contemporary Latin American society, violence emerges as much more than a social
aberration: Violence is a mechanism for keeping in place the very institutions and policies that
neoliberal democracies have fashioned over the last several decades, and an instrument for
coping with the myriad problems that neoliberal democracies have generated. Of course,
recognition of these problems does imply a measure of failure or inadequacy on the part of the
state, in terms of its ability to address the needs of its citizens. But rather than seeing violence as
an indicator of the distance a state has fallen from the (implicitly Western) democratic ideal,
violent pluralism allows us to analyze the role that violence plays in preserving or challenging a
particular form of lived democracy, understanding that reality in its own terms rather than as a
measure of movement away from a baseline that even occidental democracies would have a hard
In offering this analysis, the editors of this volume (a political scientist and a political
anthropologist, respectively) attempt to transcend the academic Iron Curtain that typically
divides two disciplines which, at least in the Latin American context, could profit greatly from
cross-disciplinary dialogue. Both anthropology and political science offer unique and important
insights into political institutions and practices in contemporary society, yet each has its blind
the “top down” perspective that reveals the workings of states, institutions, and transnational
processes at what may be called the “macro” level of analysis; anthropology, in contrast,
typically works from the “bottom up,” with a concern for the everyday lived experience of
ordinary people within the context of these larger states, institutions, and processes. Each of
these approaches can offer valuable insights into the workings of politics in non-Western
settings. But, as this chapter hopefully demonstrates, these insights can be significantly
strengthened by the kind of collaboration that we have undertaken here, one which joins the top-
down and the bottom-up to produce a perspective that is more complete than either one alone can
provide.
Such a collaboration is made all the more necessary by the subject matter which we
engage here. For violence is not merely an abstraction, the unpleasant working out of
institutional failures and deficiencies. Nor is it only the reflexive actions of the oppressed,
lashing out at one another or at the state in frustration and rage, or in some romantically
stems from multiple sources, transforms all that it touches, and configures daily life and the
workings of governance in various ways. Insight into these processes is the goal of the
interdisciplinary analysis presented in this introduction, and in the substantive chapters that
follow it.
On April 9th, 2003, the United States invaded Iraq in an effort justified, in part, to bring
democracy to the Middle East, the region of the world arguably least affected by the “third
wave” of democratization.10 Before the US-led war, Iraq in some ways resembled Latin
America’s political past: A throwback to a troubling time when political leaders wore olive drab
uniforms and dictatorial regimes systematically jailed, tortured, and killed their political
opponents. But the collapse of the Ba’athist regime, as is by now well-known, did not herald a
smooth transition to democracy. After the fall of Baghdad, groups of adolescents and young men
armed with light combat weapons appeared to defend poor peripheral neighborhoods, crime
began to grow dramatically, and, today, occupying forces find themselves pinned down by an
insurgency given to small-scale but widespread violence such as roadside bombings, suicide
attacks, and kidnappings. Ironically, in its purported quest to establish democracy, the US
appears to have succeeded in turning a brutal but stable dictatorship into a country mired in civil
violence, a situation remarkably similar to that of other current trouble spots: Haiti, Afghanistan,
All through this difficult period, as the Coalition Provisional Authority and the Iraqi
Transitional Government worked to hold elections and build some form of pluralistic political
institutions, the Bush administration and its allies have employed the logic and language of
support for their efforts in Iraq.11 This has unfolded in two principal ways. First, as Thomas
Carothers has argued, the policy analysis of democratization explicitly asserts that political
transition to more open government can occur under virtually any structural, historical, and
10 On the third wave see S. Huntington, The Third Wave: Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century, (Norman:
University of Oklahoma Press, 1991).
11 Indeed, Larry Diamond, one of the leading scholars on democratization, served the US government in Iraq in its
efforts to build democratic government there and has written about the reasons behind that country’s very rough
transition process. L. Diamond, “Lessons from Iraq,” Journal of Democracy, 16 no. 1 (2005); also see L. Diamond,
Squandered Victory: The American Occupation and the Bungled Effort to Bring Democracy to Iraq, (New York:
Owl Books, 2005).
social conditions, though actual consolidation may be greatly affected by social conditions.12
Thus a country with a history of internal violence (e.g., Argentina or El Salvador), a country with
no experience with democratic government (e.g., Russia), or a country with gross income
inequalities (e.g., Brazil) could successfully transition to democracy if political conditions were
skillfully managed by local political elites and outside powers, and if those same groups could
build the right types of democratic institutions. 13 Second, many of the Bush administration’s
claims about the importance of establishing democratic institutions and holding elections reflect
the belief by some working within the democratization framework that electoral processes can
substantially resolve conflicts and alleviate internal tensions, and that countries transitioning out
of authoritarian rule tend to move toward democracy.14 This perception reflects Western
inherently transformative power. As just one example, in 2004 New York Times columnist
David Brooks asserted explicitly that the civil war in El Salvador ended because (not when) both
sides agreed to hold elections, leading him to declare the importance of holding elections in
Iraq.15
The Iraq War points to a number of the limitations of the democratization paradigm as it
is typically applied in Latin America. Despite this paradigm’s potent legitimacy as an instrument
for understanding and even facilitating the transition out of authoritarianism, it is not at all
12 T. Carothers, “The End of the Transition Paradigm,” Journal of Democracy 13 no. 1 (2002), pp. 8; on social
conditions in the second phase of democratic transitions see A. Pzeworski, M. Alvarez, J. A. Cheibub, and F.
Limogni, “What Makes Democracies Endure,” Journal of Democracy, 7 no. 1 (1996), pp. 39-40.
13 For example see G. O’Donnell and P. Schmitter, Transitions from Authoritarian Rule: Tentative Conclusions
about Uncertain Democracies, (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1986); also on the hope for building
democracy under difficult conditions see G. O’Donnell, “In Partial Defense of an Evanescent Paradigm,” Journal of
Democracy 13 no. 3 (2002), pp. 8-9.
14 See especially, Diamond, “Lessons From Iraq,” 1pp. 9-20; see also Carothers, “The End of the Transition
Paradigm,” pp. 7-8. It should be noted, however, that recent studies of democratization have focused more
substantially on the gray zone between authoritarianism and democracy; see M. Plattner, “Introduction,” Journal of
Democracy 16 no. 1 (2005), pp. 5-6.
15 D. Brooks, “The Insurgency Buster,” The New York Times, September 28, 2004, pp. 25; an expert on post conflict
transitions debunked Brook’s analysis in a letter to the editor.
certain that this approach has provided scholars with the appropriate theoretical tools to explain
how political systems operate in developing countries today. Viewed from the context of
democratic regime but where social conflict, crime, and ongoing violence have become a way of
life, the difficulties encountered in the Iraqi democratic transition are hardly a surprise.
Colombia, for example, despite having some of the region’s longest-standing democratic
institutions, is mired in a 40 year civil war. Peru also suffers from ongoing problems with
insurgency and street crime despite the existence of formal democratic institutions and regular
elections. Governments throughout Central America today face threats from maras, transnational
youth gangs with roots in the deportation of young immigrants from the US, whose existence has
justified broad violations of the civil and human rights of poor young men in those countries.16
Jamaica, Brazil, and Venezuela all suffer from astonishingly high levels of street crime. Bolivia,
democratic for more than 20 years, has one of the world’s highest rates of vigilante lynchings. 17
Despite the apparent success of democratic elections in that country, recent Bolivian history has
been marked by state violence against coca growers, unionists, and political demonstrators, as
well as by the more quotidian violence of police corruption and domestic abuse; indeed, not long
after the election of an indigenous, leftist government in 2005, Bolivia again experienced deadly
clashes between police and public demonstrators. The transformation of private security firms
(which have arisen in many countries to compensate for the inadequate administration of official
policing) into mafias and paramilitaries is a phenomenon being watched by concerned observers
16 See for example, Amnesty International, “Honduras: No More Promises—Investigate Murders of Children and
Youth,” (New York, Amnesty International, 2003), <<www.ai.org>>.
17 D. Goldstein, “In Our Own Hands.”
From one perspective, criticizing the U.S. government’s apparent implementation of the
democracy paradigm in Iraq may seem unfair to scholars of democratization. After all, this
would not be the first case in which a government had optimistically interpreted academic work
to justify its political efforts. The main reason why these criticisms have to be taken seriously,
though, is that while scholarship on democratization is substantially more sophisticated than the
claims that the Bush administration has made, the structure of much of the existing literature,
especially as it pertains to persistent criminal and civil violence, lends itself to misinterpretation.
It is notable that in his January, 2002 criticism of the “transtitions paradigm,” Thomas Carothers
offered many of the arguments about democratic transitions that the Bush administration would
eventually make in mid-2004 about the democratization process in Iraq.18 Further, noted
Authority in Baghdad. His analysis of the failure to build a stable democracy in the years after
the US invasion focuses principally on institutional failings on the part of the US such as not
sending enough troops, a failure to build trust and legitimacy, improperly timing elections, and
distributing funds around Iraq in unproductive ways. His work provides very limited discussion
of the underlying social, political, and economic conditions that have given rise – not just in Iraq
but in much of the developing world – to the types of guerillas, terrorists, and militias that today
contribute to the violence and political instability in Iraq.19 Even more telling, in a book length
discussion of his experiences in Iraq entitled Squandered Victory, crime merits only three
mentions over three hundred pages and in discussing his wider understanding of democratization
18 The controversial Carothers’ piece, published in the Journal of Democracy, was extensively criticized two issues
later in the same journal by a host of practitioners and scholars.
19 L. Diamond, “Lessons from Iraq,” pp. 12-21.
efforts around the world Diamond never even mentions the persistent issue of crime. 20 In other
words, one of the leading democratization scholars sees the US failure in Iraq as principally
stemming from institutional and tactical errors by the US, rather than recognizing the systemic
processes, common to democratic transitions in Iraq and other countries, in which order is
constructed outside of or with blatant disregard for states and state power (a point which we
develop further, below). Democracy in Iraq may not have been Squandered at all. Given the
conditions of violence in much of the developing world, any non-authoritarian system may have
An uncritical belief in the transformative power of democracy has limited policy makers’
ability to forecast the violence inherent in democratic transitions. Similarly, the inability of
between violence and politics has left these scholars unable to comment critically about
problems that have arisen in the so-called democratic transition, in Iraq, Latin America, and
elsewhere.21 How can we conceptualize ongoing violence in these countries in a way that goes
beyond simply blaming imperfect electoral processes and weak domestic institutions? In what
follows, we will argue that this involves necessarily moving beyond the constraints of
material loss of rights, to a conception of politics that looks to the complex ways that order
(and/or disorder) is created through the interactions of multiple violent actors, both within and
20 L. Diamond, Squandered Victory: The American Occupation and the Bungled Effort to Bring Democracy to Iraq,
(New York: Owl Books, 2006), 19-21, 47, 77, 306-307.
21 The exception to this statement is Larry Diamond, whose analysis of the failure to manage an effective transition
in Iraq focuses principally on elections, institution building, developing a strong plan for the transition, and
devolving decision making power to local leaders quickly. Diamond, “Lessons From Iraq,” pp. 13-21. Yet even
these are stock answers that offer little in the way of a program for responding to armed insurgency or ongoing
street, in Iraq or elsewhere.
without the state, a situation that characterizes so many political regimes in the developing world
today.
Most scholars in what might be called the “democratization school” advance a minimal
definition of democracy based on a conception (initially put forth by Robert Dahl) of polyarchy.
According to this theory, democracy exists when formal institutions operate and when the basic
civil, political, and legal rights necessary for the proper operation of those institutions are widely
extended to the population.22 However, in its exclusive focus on elections, institutions, and
rights, this formulation avoids the messy realities of actually existing political systems as they
are found in Latin America (and elsewhere) today. Particularly problematic to these models is
the existence of widespread violence, criminality, and insecurity within nations whose political
systems might otherwise be characterized as democratic, if not polyarchic. Indeed, the obvious
lack of basic public safety and widespread distribution of rights, among many other problems,
brings into question the possibility of establishing prototypical polyarchies in Latin America. 23
This discrepancy between the ideal of polyarchy and the decidedly violent reality of
political life on the ground in Latin America has led to unfavorable comparisons between the
types of liberal or social democracy that exist in North America and Western Europe and those
found in Latin America. 24 Political scientists’ deployment of various negative modifiers to refer
to Latin America’s political regimes emerges as part of the effort to differentiate these “shallow”
22 G. O’Donnell, “Illusions about Consolidation,” Journal of Democracy, 7 no. 2 (1996), pp. 34-35.
23 This question has been addressed most notably by Guillermo O’Donnell. See G. O’Donnell, “Democracy, Law,
and Comparative Politics,” Studies in Comparative International Development, 36 no. 1 (2001), pp. 7-36.
24 D. Collier and S. Levitsky, “Democracy with Adjectives: Conceptual Innovation in Comparative Research,”
World Politics 49 no. 3 (1997); also see L. Diamond, “Is the Third Wave Over,” Journal of Democracy 7 no. 3
(1996), pp. 22.also see A. Schedler, “What is Democratic Consolidation,” Journal of Democracy, 9 no. 2 (1998),
pp. 92-94; O’Donnell, “Democracy Law and Politics,” pp. 7-8;for an interesting recent take on the debate see A.
Armony and H. Schamis, “Babel in Democratization Studies,” Journal of Democracy, 16 no. 4 (2005).
Southern democracies from the apparently “deeper,” more successful Northern varieties. Such
comparisons also imply a teleological or evolutionary trajectory, suggesting that, with external
progress can be made from the violent, “illiberal” democracies of “developing nations” towards
the polyarchic ideal of the developed North. 25 This focus on institutions is part and parcel of the
underlying assumption of the democratization school that democracy, given the right
management and organizational structure, can evolve anywhere. As a result, writing on politics
in Latin America in the major political science journals principally focuses on such issues as
elections to fill presidencies and parliamentary bodies, the tensions within and among the
making, and the struggle among various levels of government and IGOs about budgeting and
policy.
Scholars’ insistence on viewing contemporary politics through the lens of the democratic
ideal, deviations from it, and efforts to improve existing political systems creates a certain
myopia in their perceptions of ongoing crime, violence, and rights violations among poor and
marginal groups in Latin America. When these issues do come up, they are mentioned either in
the context of ongoing or recently concluded civil wars, or invoked as evidence demonstrating
how failures of state institutions lead to violence. 26 Bloodshed and rights violations are high, it is
claimed, because governments do not have enough money, because they are simply not able to
manage the bureaucratic complexities in some police agencies to prevent excesses, or because
25 Notably O’Donnell specifically eschews this arguing that, instead, democratization itself is an unending process
and, hence, the democratization paradigm, should remain the main theoretical basis for understanding democracy in
Latin America. See G. O’Donnell, “Polyarchies and the (Un)Rule of Law in Latin America: A Partial Conclusion,”
in The (Un)Rule of Law and the Underprivileged in Latin America, Juan E. Méndez, Guillermo O'Donnell, and
Paulo Sérgio Pinheiro eds., (Notre Dame: University of NotreDame Press, 1998), pp. 303–38. In its own way, this
is also a teleological argument. It is just a teleology in which the telos has already arrived.
26 A comprehensive example of this approach can be found in United Nations Development Program, “Democracy
in Latin America: Towards a Citizens Democracy,” (New York: United Nations Development Program, 2004).
interested politicians ensure that the state fails to have the capacity to maintain order in some
areas.27 In this vein Guillermo O’Donnell writes that “even in countries where aspirations for
democracy have been satisfied by the inauguration of democratic regimes, the rule of law may be
compromised. Indeed, most contemporary Latin American countries, like new democracies in
other parts of the world, are cases where national-level democratic regimes coexist with
undemocratic subnational regimes and severe gaps in the effectiveness of basic civil rights.”
Along similar lines, the UNDP’s 2005 report on Democracy in Latin America devotes only eight
of its 288 pages to issues relating to the widespread violence affecting the region, lodging its
discussion of these issues firmly within the logic of state and democratic failure. The report
reads:
There is no doubt that since the end of military rule in the Southern Cone … and the
resolution of the armed conflicts in Central America… progress has been made with
respect to unjustified deprivation of freedom, torture and political assassinations.
Nevertheless, the progress achieved is not as great as could have been expected after the
elimination of totalitarian regimes and the end of nearly all wars in the region. There is
one substantial reservation: the vast majority of the violations are not the consequence of
deliberate and planned action by the state, but, rather, of its inability (or sometimes
unwillingness) to enforce the effective rule of law and to ensure that it enjoys a monopoly
of force… Another relevant issue concerns citizens’ security and the State’s ability to
provide this public good. A serious defect is that, in many democracies in Latin America,
the state does not ensure the physical security of wide sectors of the population… This
poses a challenge to our institutions, to the governments that are part of the system and to
the future of democracy in Latin America.”28
The rest of the report contains a little less than a page on illegal actors and the dangers they
27 See for example, M. Hinton, The State on the Streets: Police and Politics in Argentina and Brazil, Boulder:
Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2006; G. O’Donnell, “Why the Rule of Law Matters,” pp. 42; on informal rules and
police violence see Brinks, “Informal Institutions and the Rule of Law,” pp. 6-7; G. O’Donnell, “On the State,
Democratization, and Some Conceptual Problems: A Latin American View with Glances at some Post-communist
Countries,” World Development 21 (1993), pp. 1355-69; on policing and violence in Argentina and Brazil see
Hinton , “A Distant Reality,” passim esp. pp. 90.
28 Ibid., pp. 112-113.
29 An important variant on this approach focuses not on state failures but, rather, on how state institutions can be
reformed to more adequately protect basic rights. For examples see J. Zaverucha, “Military Justice in the State of
In other words, much of the writing on politics in Latin America today, while both
sophisticated and insightful, is focused on how to get regimes that have formal but weak
democratic institutions to become polyarchic. Though not overtly stated, in all of these texts the
Europe or North America. In the process, it is assumed, such “illiberal” states may be able to
drop the negative adjectives that often modify their democracies and citizenship will approach
In many ways, the limitations and problems with this approach are evident. 30 As a
reading of the UNDP report clearly suggests, simply labeling regimes “democratic” does not
mean that they are normatively positive, inclusive, effective at guaranteeing rights, or able to
accomplish the reforms many claim are necessary to achieve such conditions. Nor is there reason
to believe, after twenty years of civil strife and growing criminal violence in much of the
developmentalist fallacy, based on the faulty assumption that the United States and other
Western nations are, in fact, ideal-type polyarchies.31 Indeed, the political regimes that exist in
Latin America, as elsewhere, may have substantial difficulty achieving polyarchy. More
importantly, they may also produce fairly static degrees of violence and rights abuse, and they
may depend on a base level of violence to achieve collective political objectives. It is critical in
this case to understand violence as more than merely the residue of democratic failure, the
evident result of states failing to function as per the polyarchic prescription. Violence here
Pernambuco after the Brazilian Military Regime: An Authoritarian Legacy,” Latin American Research Review 34
no. 2 (1999), pp. 43–74; J. C. Sutil, “Judicial Reforms in Latin America: Good News for the Underprivileged,” J.
Méndez, G. O’Donnell, and P. S. Pinheiro, The (Un)Rule of Law and the underprivileged in Latin America, (Notre
Dame: Notre Dame, 1998), pp. 255-277.
30 On the politics of the democratization project see J. Paley, Marketing Democracy: Power and Social Movements
in Post-Dictatorship Chile, (University of California Press (Berkeley), 2001), pp. 5-7.
31 Desmond-Include a note here explaining why they are not.
emerges as a key element of Latin American democracy itself, the basis upon which it was
founded and a critical component allowing its maintenance, as the next section explores.
All of this should not be taken to mean that we believe that it is impossible for these
regimes to become polyarchies. Such a sharp rigorous claim is beyond the scope of the chapters
in this volume. The evidence we present here though does suggest that that there is not a simple
path in much of the region to lower levels of violence. Violence is implicated both in the
institutional structure of the regimes and the way these regimes are inserted into the international
system. Violence stems from the structure and activities that support existing social relations
and the way state power is exercised. Changing this will require more than minor administrative
fixes and reform programs and will, as will be discussed in the conclusion to this volume,
involve reorienting the relationship between Latin American polities and both the international
America also requires us to adopt an historical perspective, one that allows us to comprehend
democracy emerging not out of some kind of inevitable evolution of political man, but as the real
product of a particular historical conjuncture unfolding within the context of actual Latin
region with global forces of imperialism, socialism, and the Cold War.
Over the course of the nineteenth century Latin American states remained relatively weak
as a result of relatively limited inter-state tensions. The resulting political systems in the region
developed, as Miguel Angel Centeno has noted, developed militaries focused on dealing with
internal dissent rather than fighting international wars. Sub-national political elites retained a
substantial amount of power vis-à-vis central states and the reigning political system can be
generally property owners, retained the voting franchise and the remainder of the population, the
small working class, women, and Afro-Latinos and indigenous people, remained largely
excluded from political participation and court protections. In this environment empowered
landowners retained a substantial number of legal rights and defacto power over much of the
population exercising control over politics and violence beyond the control of the national state.
These conditions began to change in around the turn of the twentieth century as
substantial immigration from Europe and Asia as well as a growing industrial sector empowered
segments of the urban working class, creating conditions for the emergence of political
movements and parties demanding greater inclusion and collective rights. Over time, most
countries in the region, in the context of substantial political and social conflict, would extend
some basic social guarantees to the working class. These rights were extended under both
democratic regimes, as occurred in Colombia during the Revolucion en Marcha, and under more
authoritarian regimes, as occurred in Mexico under Cardenas and in Brazil during the Estado
Novo.32 As Greg Grandin details, during the period immediately following the second world war,
most Latin American states had become democratic, adopting a model of what he terms
“democratic socialism” which built on efforts at inclusion and invited the political participation
of the working class and advocated a developmentalist vision of the national economy that
included notions of redistributing elements of national wealth from foreign ownership and some
deficiencies of these political systems, including a tendency towards repressive forms of state
corporatisim at times allied with fascist ideologies and the continued exclusion of large
segments of the population, , they offered a promise of empowerment to many long excluded
from national political engagement, espousing a collectivist ideology that provided the
intellectual basis of postwar democracy. 34 With the emergence of the Cold War in the late 1940s
and early 1950s, these democracies over the next twenty years gradually gave way to military
coups and dictatorships, which (with the backing of the United States) cracked down on political
dissent and implemented policies that regarded national development as inherently antagonistic
to democratic governance. These states and their security forces relied on violence and new
technologies of repression to combat the lingering influence of the postwar democratic period,
The establishment of neoliberal economics in Latin America during the 1970s and
especially 1980s hinged directly on the introduction of a new model of democracy in the region,
one based on an individualist concept of self and society. Rather than a social welfare state that
would provide for the needs of its citizens, neoliberal democracy would be based on a limited
and circumscribed state whose principal task was to provide a stable and secure field for
transnational investment and individual self realization. This new kind of democracy, as Grandin
argues, was constructed explicitly in opposition to the older mid-century model, made possible in
the wake of Cold War violence and terror, which had long targeted progressive social
33 G. Grandin, The Last Colonial Massacre: Latin America in the Cold War, (Chicago, University of Chicago Press,
2004).
34 L. Bethell and I. Roxborough, eds, Latin America Between the Second World War and the Cold War, 1944-1948,
(Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1993).
35 G. Grandin, The Last Colonial Massacre: Latin America in the Cold War, 2004.
The threat of mid-century social movements was that they provided a venue in which self
and solidarity could be imagined as existing in sustaining relation to one another through
collective politics that looked toward the state to dispense justice. Latin American
democracy as an ideal and a practice was always more participatory and egalitarian than
it was procedural and individualistic. In many countries, Cold War terror changed that,
imposing a more restrictive model, one that defined individualism as economic self-
interest and advanced it through free market policies. 36
Such democratic conceptions as rights and citizenship were constructed along similar lines,
grounded in a notion of the liberal citizen whose basic political identity derived from his or her
individual nature and personal relationship to the national state, rather than in terms of his or her
membership in a particular group or class (as in, for example, more recent conceptions of
indigenous rights).37
Historic forms of political practice in the region, then, were tempered by their being
inculcated through a frame of neoliberal capitalism and economic globalization, whose emphasis
on the individual nature of rights and belonging in some ways runs counter to the collectivist and
participatory nature of democracy itself. From such a perspective, violence can only be
democratic state to break down opposition to its particular forms and manifestations, or as a
collective behavior constituent of democracy’s very fabric. Alternatively, though, democracy can
be understood as a product of struggle, even of violent struggle, and conflict as a basic element
36G. Grandin, The Last Colonial Massacre: Latin America in the Cold War, 2004, p.14.
37N. Postero and L. Zamosc, eds., The Struggle for Indigenous Rights in Latin America, (Sussex, Sussex Academic
Press, 2004).
evolution or economic prosperity. It certainly did not emerge as an inevitable by-product
of individualism or the market. It developed because masses of people organized
collectively to demand it.38
clear, neoliberal democracy is itself responsible for much of the social violence we see in
countries throughout Latin America. Such violence is not the simple result of institutional failure
but the logical outcome of neoliberal democracy’s unfolding. As many studies have made clear,
the trickle-down economic promises of neoliberal promoters have not been realized, instead
leading to widening income inequalities and mounting poverty across the region. Even in nations
like Chile, where the economic “miracle” of the 1990s was celebrated worldwide as a triumph of
neoliberal democracy, one in five Chileans still lives in poverty and the country remains divided
into “two Chiles,” one rich and one poor. 39 Such poverty, and the lack of employment and
educational opportunities that have accompanied it, are directly linked to the social violence we
describe in this volume. Economic inequalities, along with a declining public confidence in the
representative nature of the neoliberal state, have also been at the heart of the new social
mobilizations emerging across the region in the early to mid 2000s, as popular groups and social
movements once again have mobilized to contest the contradictions of neoliberal democracy. In
their insistence on a more inclusive, even socialist democratic politics and economy, these
groups sometimes employ violence, as does the state as it resists their calls for reform. The 2003
Gas War in Bolivia is a clear example: In the effort to enforce a neoliberal prescription for
natural resource exportation, soldiers defending the democratic state of Gonzalo Sanchez de
Lozada fired on and killed more than 50 unarmed protesters, leading to the President’s
38 G. Eley, Forging Democracy: The History of the Left in Europe, 1850-2000, (Oxford, Oxford University Press,
2002); cited in G. Grandin, The Last Colonial Massacre: Latin America in the Cold War, 2004, p. 16.
39 P. Winn, ed., Victims of the Chilean Miracle: Workers and Neoliberalism in the Pinochet Era, 1973-2002,
(Durham, Duke University Press, 2004).
resignation and, ultimately, the ascendancy of leftist union leader Evo Morales to the Bolivian
presidency.40 In other contexts, the problems of insecurity unleashed by the policies and
practices of neoliberal democracy specifically have created situations in which violence emerges
as a logical response. The Bolivian state’s compliance with the United States’ international “war
on drugs,” for example, has generated circumstances of extreme precariousness for rural
cultivators, who frequently experience the violence of police and security forces intent on
prosecuting the drug war at the expense of poor farm families. Meanwhile, marginal urban
communities lack police protection, and so deploy vigilante violence as a technique of providing
security and “justice” to their communities. Such violence, it must be observed, cannot be
understood as relating to democratic failure, but, perversely, to its success: lynch mobs, like
private security firms operating in other contexts, are clear manifestations of the logic of
neoliberal democracy, which urges self-help and individual responsibility to local communities
confronting social welfare conditions in which the state does not consider itself obligated to
intervene.41
The upshot here is that we cannot see the political system and its institutions as somehow
divorced from broader social, political, historical, and economic contexts, an assumption
inherent in the idea that democracy can be implemented anywhere, regardless of circumstances.
Violence in these countries is caused not only by a failure of institutions but is also related to
patterns of international trade, transnational political and economic regimes, grave conditions of
wealth inequality, and particular historic forms of social relations in specific countries, sub-
40B. Kohl and L. Farthing, Impasse in Bolivia: Neoliberal Hegemony and Popular Resistance, (London, Zed, 2006).
41D. M. Goldstein, “Flexible Justice: Neoliberal Violence and Self-Help Security in Bolivia,” Critique of
Anthropology 25 (2005), 389-411.
national regions, or cities. Violence, indeed, may be physical and structural. 42 As is well known,
under neoliberal democracy many Latin American debtor states have been forced to comply with
the structural adjustment dictates of transnational lending agencies, diminishing state investment
in and administration of national social and economic life, devolving responsibility for social
reproduction to individuals, families, and local communities.43 In many parts of Latin America,
crime has risen, police corruption has mounted, and judicial services have been unable to provide
security to the majority of the national population. 44 Part of the reason violence has become so
pervasive in much of Latin America are the particular ways that trade liberalization and neo-
liberal economic systems have interacted with the political environment of post-authoritarian
Latin America. Growing pressure to lower trade barriers has led to an increase in drug and arms
trafficking in the Americas.45 At the same time pressures for structural reform have led to cuts in
state funding to both policing and social welfare programs.46 Both of these trends have occurred
in the context of improvements of military technology that have made it very easy to deliver
relatively high powered weapons into the hands of civilians. 47 The United States and other
leading producers of firearms have been reluctant to adopt serious international controls on the
trade in small arms. This has all resulted in the emergence of conditions in which non-state
42 Structural violence refers to the ways in which a ruling regime or state structure systematically inhibits people
from realizing their full potential, through the institutionalization of such barriers to human achievement as poverty,
sexism, or racism. For an application in anthropology, see P. Farmer, Pathologies of Power: Health, Human Rights,
and the New War on the Poor, (Berkley: University of California Press , 2003).
43 D. Harvey, A Brief History of Neoliberalism, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
44 M. Ungar, Elusive Reform: Democracy and the Rule of Law in Latin America, (Boulder: Lynne Reiner, 2002).
45 P. Andreas, “When Policies Collide: Market Reform, Market Prohibition, and the Narcotization of the Mexican
Economy,” in The Illicit Global Economy and State Power, H. R. Friman and P. Andreas eds., (Lanham: Rowman
and Littlefield Publishers, 1999), pp. 126-135.
46 On this issue see M. Alcantara, “Politics and Society in Latin America at the Start of the New Millennium,” Social
Forces 83 no. 4 (2005), pp. 1661, 1668.
47 On the impact of light combat weapons on violence in Rio de Janeiro see L. Dowdney, “De aviãozinhos a
soldades: o crescente envolvimento de crianças nas lutas de grupos armadas do tráfico de drogas no Rio de
Janeiro,” in Insegurança Pública: Reflexões seobre a criminalidade e a violência urbana, N. Vieira Oliveira ed.,
(São Paulo: Editora Nova Alexandria, 2003), pp. 110-118.
violent actors have proliferated, and states have faced very serious challenges in controlling
The critique of evolutionist democratization theory, offered above, is all the more
important given that ethnographies of democracy and democratization point to the profound and
ongoing struggles within civil society, where the instantiation of democracy is contested and
negotiated, and within the state itself, where the language of “democracy” may be used to paper
over the reality of in-name-only democratic states. 48 Research by anthropologists into what
might be called “the discourse of democracy” includes the ways in which the language of and
ideas about democracy circulate within society, mobilizing resistant political movements and
justifying the maintenance of violent state regimes, demonstrating how “democracy” transcends
state institutions and electoral processes. Thus Julia Paley urges anthropologists to consider “the
strategic deployment of the term democracy, its power implications, competition over its
meanings, its manifestations in institutions and social arrangements, and the way attendant
discourses circulate within and among countries.” 49 Despite its potential for broadening scholarly
by those who understand politics to be properly located only in the domain of political
institutions.
ideological and discursive instrument in political conflict and struggle opens critical doors for the
study of democratic society in Latin America. This is particularly the case for understanding
48 D. Nelson, A Finger in the Wound: Body Politics in Quincentennial Guatemala, (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1999).
49 Paley, Marketing Democracy, 2002:475. See also M. C. Gutmann, The Romance of Democracy: Compliant
Defiance in Contemporary Mexico, (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002); A. Ong, Flexible Citizenship:
The Cultural Logics of Transnationality, (Durham: Duke University Press, 1999); K. Verdery, What Was Socialism,
What Comes Next? (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996).
violence within contemporary Latin American political regimes. Rather than viewing violence as
anthropological perspective on democratic discourse reveals the ways in which democracy and
violence are intimately entangled in both the establishment of democratic regimes and their
ongoing maintenance. For example, in his study of the cultural politics of statecraft in
Venezuela, Fernando Coronil has noted the shifts that the meaning of “democracy” has
undergone in recent Venezuelan history; these include the use of the term by the political party
Acción Democrática, which came to power in 1945 through a violent coup that toppled a
constitutional government.50 In this case, “democracy” was used to legitimate military rule and
civilian rule, the repressive apparatus of the dictatorship continues to be manifest in the
democratic state; as Jennifer Schirmer (cited in Paley 2002) notes, “after decades of naked
military rule, the Guatemalan military have crafted a unique Counterinsurgent Constitutional
State in which State violence has been reincarnated as democracy.” 51 Meanwhile, elsewhere in
the region military regimes have actually come to power through democratic elections, thereby
maintaining violent and oppressive practices within formal democracies, as Julie Taylor has
observed in Argentina,52 and as the election of former dictator Hugo Banzer in 1997
demonstrated for Bolivia.53 Such examples indicate the complex relationship between democracy
and violence in Latin America: As the violent legacies of authoritarian regimes have been
50 F. Coronil, The Magical State: Nature, Money and Modernity in Venezuela, (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1997).
51 J. Schirmer, The Guatemalan Military Project: A Violence Called Democracy, (Philadelphia: University of
Pennsylvania Press, 1998); see also K. B. Warren, “Conclusion: Death Squads and Wider Complicities: Dilemmas
for the Anthropology of Violence,” in Death Squad: The Anthropology of State Terror, Jeffrey A. Sluka, ed.,
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2000, pp. 226-247.
52 J. Taylor, “The Outlaw State and the Lone Rangers,” in Perilous States: Conversations on Culture, Politics, and
Nation, G. E. Marcus, ed., (Chicago: University of Chicago Press (Chicago), 1993, pp. 283-303.
53 H. Sanabria, “Resistance and the Arts of Domination: Miners and the Bolivian State,” Latin American
Perspectives 27 no. 1 (2000), pp. 56-81.
reinscribed as democracies, their continued abuse is legitimated by democratic rhetoric. It also
suggests, as Paley points out, that “democracy” cannot be considered a free-floating signifier,
detached from reality and infinitely malleable; rather, as the above examples demonstrate, the
democratic discourse has important institutional referents through which it operates and exerts its
force, a point that anthropologists of democracy and violence have frequently noted. 54
An approach that focuses solely on formal measures of democracy, then, and which
regards violence as a deviation from the ideal of polyarchy, is clearly inadequate to understand
the intricate dialectic between state power and violence in Latin America, or the complex
political, social, and economic circumstances that give rise to and maintain political and social
violence.55 If, as we suggest, violence in Latin America today is an integral component of both
the state formation process and of challenges to the state, then traditional approaches to both
democracy and violence are limited in what they have to offer to our interpretations of local
expansion of the rule of law, both worthy causes but nevertheless analytical dead ends,
remaining as they do within the normative framework of democracy and its correlates. The
question is not only how the legal system or police institutions operate or fail to operate, but also
includes how violence and contentious politics are foundational to the political systems of
contemporary Latin America. This does not mean that understanding police, courts, or even
elections and budgeting are unimportant. Rather, it means that these different institutional
phenomena must be understood in a much broader political and social context, one which
54 J. Paley, “Toward an Anthropology of Democracy,” Annual Review of Anthropology 31 (2002), p. 477; J. Paley,
“Accountable Democracy: Citizens' Impact on Public Decision Making in Postdictatorship Chile,” American
Ethnologist 31 no. 4 (2004), pp. 495-513.
55 See for example, A. Garro, “Access to Justice for the Poor in Latin America,” J. Méndez, G. O’Donnell, and P. S.
Pinheiro eds., The (Un)Rule of Law and the Underprivileged in Latin America, (Notre Dame: University of Notre
Dame Press, 1998, pp. 287-292.
includes the operation, distribution, and structure of state and non-state violence in the region.
The regimes that exist in Latin America today may thus represent another type of political
formation at variance from both democracy and authoritarianism, a type whose outlines the
To understand the relationship between violence and democracy in Latin America today,
we need to move ourselves off the conceptual ground of democracy and democratization and the
political projects associated with it. Ending authoritarianism was supposed to create a political
outcome in which the means of violence ended up in the hands of a state apparatus controlled by
the people which, by virtue of its popular nature, was unwilling to tolerate widespread violence
against the population. What is significant about politics in the region today is not that
democratic instead of authoritarian regimes control national governments (part, after all, of an
alternating cycle whose recent history we have detailed above), but that the political regimes that
dominate much of the region appear to be unable to consolidate control over sub-state violence.
These regimes co-exist with organized, non-state, violent actors, and stand side-by-side with
multiple forms of sub-state order that exist separately from but in constant interaction with the
state sanctioned rule of law. Also significant is the changing nature of civil society in Latin
America, which in many countries must be understood to include multiple violent actors. Rather
than operating peacefully to expand and deepen the rights of democratic citizens, many
organizations and groups that collectively constitute “civil society” in the region today operate
violently, using violence and its threat as a basis for their own collective organizing. Contrary to
expectations that civil society inevitably acts as a watchdog to prevent state abuses of citizens’
rights, these civil society groups (which include vigilantes, paramilitaries, and other so-called
“justice-making” entities, including even local base communities) instead function at times to
impose greater restrictions on rights (particularly rights of criminals and the accused), often in
forms of violence. Colombia, for example, suffers from a forty-year-old guerilla war,
paramilitary violence, and large-scale drug trafficking.57 Brazil, a country with very different
political and criminal dynamics, suffers from large-scale urban gang violence, police impunity, a
growing problem with vigilantism and death squads in some cities, and rural land conflict in
which wealthy landowners fend off landless workers through hired guns and private militias. 58
Jamaica, on the other hand, suffers from gang conflict in cities and faces a growing problem of
politically and criminally aligned private security firms.59 Elsewhere in Latin America, a myriad
of other actors employ violence: these range from state actors such as police and the military
(who may or may not act in violation of the law, or who follow the orders of superior officers
and elected leaders); to non-state or civil society actors, including private security firms, lynch
mobs, and death squads (whose members may double as police, soldiers, or fire fighters at other
56 A.S. Godoy, Popular Injustice: Violence, Community, and Law in Latin America (Stanford, Stanford University
Press, 2006); D.M. Goldstein, “Human Rights as Culprit, Human Rights as Victim: Rights and Security in the State
of Exception,” in M. Goodale and S.E. Merry, eds., The Practice of Human Rights: Tracking Law Between the
Global and the Local, (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2007), pp. 49-77.
57 F. Thoumi, Illegal Drugs, Economy, and Society in the Andes, (Washington: Woodrow Wilson Center Press,
2003; R. Crandal, Driven by Drugs: US Policy Towards Colombia, (Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2002.
58 On urban Brazil see E. D. Arias, “The Dynamics of Criminal Governance: Illegal Networks and Public Order in
Rio de Janeiro,” Journal of Latin American Studies 31 no. 2 (2006); E. Leeds, “Cocaine and Parallel Polities on the
Brazilian Urban Periphery: Constraints on Local Level Democratization,” Latin American Research Review 31 no.
3 (1996); R. Gay, Lucia: Testimonies of a Drug Traffickers Woman, (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2005.
59 A. Sives, “Changing Patrons, from Politicians to Drug Don: Clientelism in Downtown Kingston, Jamaica,” Latin
American Perspectives, 29 (2002), pp. 66-89; L. Gunst, Born Fi’ Dead: A Journey Through the Jamaican Posse
Underworld, (New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1998).
times of day or during other periods of their careers); to groups institutionally further removed
(though not always completely detached) from the state, such as drug traffickers and guerillas.
While none of these lists are exhaustive, they reveal something that is often ignored in
scholars’ focus on the operation and failure of democratic institutions: Violence is pervasive in
much of Latin America, but the configuration and politics of that violence differ substantially
from place to place. In the conditions that exist today in many of the Western Hemisphere’s
republics, multiple violent actors operate within the polity and maintain different and changing
connections to state institutions and political leaders, whether those states are officially
violent pluralism. Understanding politics in Latin America now requires us to consider how
dispersed and often amorphous and seemingly apolitical violence is deployed and managed by
various actors within the political system. The concept of violent pluralism as we describe it here
has much in common with other theoretical approaches to violence emerging largely from
Hughes and Philippe Bourgois’ “continuum of violence,” 60 Paul Farmer’s “structural violence,”61
and René Girard’s “cycles of violence.”62 “Violent pluralism” goes beyond these to identify
particular social locations within Latin American states and civil societies where violence can be
civil society and violent actors maintain to one another and to different elements of the state,
including politicians, police, bureaucrats, and the military. These connections can be obvious and
be more elusive, such as when police take bribes from money launderers or politicians take
campaign donations from drug traffickers. Sometimes powerful state actors will employ violence
specialists to intimidate political or social opponents. In other cases, violence specialists from
outside the state will work to buy off powerful elements of the political establishment. In yet
other cases, such as in Colombia, military or police units may train and arm non-state actors such
as paramilitaries to support their political objectives. Finally, many of these non-state groups
have relationships with one another; they interact, build alliances, and engage in conflicts
without direct reference to the state. As discussed above, some of these groups clearly fit within
what has classically been identified as civil society, though they may operate violently and in
Having identified the actors and relationships that operate in a violently plural society, we
then can begin to ask what effects these arrangements have on politics and social relations.
Essential to this effort is developing an understanding of how violent actors and the relationships
between them affect political practice at various levels of the polity. For example, drug gang
domination of Rio’s favelas has had a substantial effect on the practice of clientelism within
those communities and on how the leaders of those communities relate to politicians. 63
Colombia and Peru, can lead to alternative forms of conflict resolution and modes of legal
pluralism.64 Alternatively, the ongoing presence of uncivil movements can have a corrosive
effect on national level politics, as Payne has argued occurs in Brazil, Argentina, and
63 E. D. Arias, “Trouble en Route: Drug Trafficking and Clientelism in Rio de Janeiro Shantytowns,” Qualitative
Sociology 29 no. 3 (2006).
64 E. D. Arias and C. Davis Rodrigues, “The Myth of Personal Security: A Discursive Model of Local level
Legitimation in Rio’s Favelas,” Latin American Politics and Society 47 no.4 (2006).
Nicaragua.65 Funds delivered to politicians through criminals can have direct effects on the
election of national political figures, as has occurred in Colombia. 66 The growing power of
criminal gangs can result in state reactions that lead to mano dura policies that circumscribe and
transform political and civil rights, as has occurred in Honduras, where gang members recently
were accused of engaging in terrorist activities. The control of non-state violent actors by a
political party can even result in riots and the collapse of a government. 67
Anthropological studies of the lived experience of poor and marginalized people within
neo-liberal democracies reveals the profound fear and all-encompassing sense of dread that
surrounds daily life in such a context, and the ways in which this structural violence translates
into more physical forms.68 For example, Daniel Goldstein has explored the fear of crime and
mistrust of the democratic state that leads some urban Bolivians to turn to lynching as an
instrument of crime control in their communities. 69 He argues that rather than some kind of
primitive holdover from a violent past, vigilante lynching actually represents a fully modern
response to insecurity, reflecting the very logic of neo-liberal democracy that requires individual
responsibility for self-preservation, without reliance on the state. 70 Similarly, in her studies of
São Paulo, Teresa Caldeira has shown how violence, urban segregation, and the emergence of
65 L. Payne, Uncivil Movements: The Armed Right Wing and Democracy in Latin America, (Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 2000).
66 M. Bowden, Killing Pablo: The Hunt for the World’s Greatest Outlaw, (London: Penguin Press, 2001), pp. 30-
40; R. Chepusiuk, The Bullet or the Bribe: Taking Down Colombia’s Cali Drug Cartel, (Westport: Preager
Publishers, 2003), pp. 60.
67 J. Auyero and T. P. Moran, “The Dynamics of Collective Violence: Dissecting Food Riots in Contemporary
Argentina,” paper presented at the 2004 Janey Conference on Latin America at the New School for Social Research,
electronic copy.
68 In other contexts, see L. Green, Fear as a Way of Life: Maya Widows in Rural Guatemala, (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1999); S. Merry, Urban Danger: Life in a Neighborhood of Strangers, (Philadelphia:
Temple University Press, 1981); S. Rotker, ed., Citizens of Fear: Urban Violence in Latin America, New
Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2002.
69 Goldstein, “Flexible Justice,” pp. 389-411. See also D. Goldstein, The Spectacular City: Violence and
Performance in Urban Bolivia, (Durham: Duke University Press, 2004). Interesting work from political science on
this topic is being done by A. Snodgrass Godoy, “Lynchings and the Democratization of Terror in Postwar
Guatemala: Implications for Human Rights,” Human Rights Quarterly 24 no. 3 (2002), pp. 640-661.
70 A notable anthropological study of neoliberal democracy in Latin America is Paley, Marketing Democracy.
privatized security systems negatively impact the quality of life under Brazilian democracy. 71
Understanding these different types of outcomes and how persistent violent actors contribute to
them is essential to interpreting how this violence brings into question existing social norms,
contributes to the formation of the political order, and constructs political subjectivities.
These sets of questions about the relationships between violent actors and the democratic
state, and how these actors and relationships affect political practices and outcomes, offer very
different insights than approaches that focus on the “failures” of the rule of law. When scholars
write about a “rule of law” they imply a certain set of generally accepted international standards
from which, for a variety of reasons, a given polity may deviate. From such a “rule of law”
perspective, the quotidian violence in Latin America represents negative deviations from an
“rule of law,” we need instead to look at what orders are present in and produced by the (more or
less) autonomous violent actors operating inside or outside a given political system.
The shape of citizenship and the role that it plays in Latin America’s political systems has
more institutionally oriented scholars arguing for a narrow, rights-based conception and others
arguing for a broader vision of what citizenship entails. For this latter group, citizenship rights
include not just basic civil and political rights but also social rights and rights particular to group
membership.72 In recent years, a substantial amount of research in political science has explored
71 T. Caldeira, City of Walls: Crime, Segregation, and Citizenship in São Paulo, (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 2000).
72 On this debate generally see E. Jelin and E. Hershberg, “Introduction: Human Rights and the Construction of
Democracy,”in Constructing Democracy: Human Rights, Citizenship, and Society in Latin America, Elizabeth Jelin
and Eric Hershberg eds., (Boulder: Westerview Press, 1996), pp. 2; on a narrow political vision of rights see G.
O’Donnell and P. Schmitter, Transitions from Authoritarian Rule: Terntative Conclusions about Uncertain
Democracies, (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1986), pp. 7-8; for a good analysis of the interplay
contestations over citizenship rights and efforts to expand and reconceptualize the notion of
citizenship in Latin America. These debates about citizenship, however, are largely inscribed
within a vision of the state and individual involved in a mutual relationship of rights and
responsibilities. Citizenship itself gains meaning from the idea that individuals can gain access to
rights by acting within a rule of law guaranteed by a democratic state. However, if state power
and the rule of law are openly contested, with powerful armed or otherwise violent groups
establishing contingent legal and political orders interspersed and interacting with state-based
systems, the notion of a general set of reciprocal rights and obligations distributed widely among
the population becomes less meaningful. In the environment that exists in Latin America today,
citizenship remains a useful way of conceptualizing a deficit of order and for discussing the
failures of the state, but it provides a less useful heuristic for conceptualizing how Latin
Americans, subject to the force of various different organized or spontaneous violent actors,
conceive of their political subjectivity and their role within localized and more national visions
of the polity.73 Focusing on Latin American regimes’ failures to protect rights provides a one-
dimensional picture of the problem of violence and the treatment of the population. Rather, we
suggest that the interaction of multiple violent actors has enabled the emergence of new forms of
political order, constitutive of new modes of political subjectivity and contestation. How has
political subjectivity been re-conceptualized in light of regimes of violent pluralism, and how has
this more broadly affected how individuals and groups attempt to protect and provide for
themselves?
between civil, political and social rights in the expansion of citizenship in post-authoritarian Latin America see E.
Jelin, “Citizenship Revisited: Solidarity Responsibility, and Rights,” in Constructing Democracy: Human Rights,
Citizenship, and Society in Latin America, Elizabeth Jelin and Eric Hershberg eds., (Boulder: Westerview Press,
1996); for a wider call for social and political citizenship see United Nations Development Program (trans. Merril
Stevenson et. al.), Democracy in Latin America: Towards a Citizens’ Democracy, (Buenos Aires: Auilar, Altea,
Taurs, Alfaguara, 2005), pp. 27-28.
73 Although for many in Latin America, the idea of citizenship remains a potent tool for demanding expanded rights
in the neoliberal era; see N.G. Postero, Now We Are Citizens (Stanford, Stanford University Press, 2007).
Answers to these questions become particularly evident in anthropological work that
recognizes that democratization does not occur solely within the institutions of the state, but
within and among groups of people who typically are considered part of “civil society.” As
discussed earlier in this chapter, the period of the democratic transition in Latin America has also
been marked by the emergence in many countries of powerful, organized social movements,
aimed at exposing and transforming the social, political, and economic inequities inherent in
neoliberal democracy, often employing the very language of democracy itself to underwrite and
legitimize their interventions. In their struggles, these social movements not only use but
strategically manipulate and rework the transnational language of democracy and human rights,
adopting non-local concepts for their own ends. 74 Thus, for example, June Nash has written of
the Zapatistas in Chiapas, Mexico, who have appropriated “democracy” to characterize their own
consensus-building practices;75 similarly, Rob Albro76 and Nancy Postero77 have each described
the role that concepts of democracy, citizenship, and rights have played in the rhetoric and
multiculturalism echoes that of Charles Hale 78 and Kay Warren79 in Guatemala, who have
analyzed the opportunities but also the perils that present themselves to cultural-rights
movements that deploy the democratic language of multiculturalism in their own struggles. Such
74 J. Paley, “Toward an Anthropology of Democracy,” Annual Review of Anthropology 31 (2002) pp. 469-496.
75 J. Nash, Maya Visions: The Quest for Autonomy in an Age of Globalization, (New York: Routledge, 2001). See
also D. L. Nugent, “Democracy, Modernity and the Public Sphere: Latin American Perspectives on North American
Models,” paper prepared for “The Anthropology of Politics and the Politics of Anthropology,” Manchester ’99:
Visions and Voices, University of Manchester, UK, October 27-31, 1999.
76 R. Albro, “The Culture of Democracy and Bolivia’s Indigenous Movements,” manuscript, nd.
77 N. G. Postero, “Bolivia’s Indígena Citizen: Multiculturalism in a Neoliberal Age,” paper presented at the meeting
of the American Anthropological Association, Chicago, IL, November 17-21, 1999.
78 C. Hale, “Does Multiculturalism Menace? Governance, Cultural Rights, and the Politics of Identity in
Guatemala,” Journal of Latin American Studies 34 (2002), pp. 485-524.
79 K. B. Warren, “Voting Against Indigenous Rights in Guatemala: Lessons from the 1999 Referendum,” in
Indigenous Movements, Self-Representation and the State, K. B. Warren and J. E. Jackson eds., University of Texas
Press (Austin), 2002.
strategic self-positioning can cut both ways, allowing social movement actors to exploit
emerging spaces of protest within the democratic context, while simultaneously enabling the
state to contain their protests within the realm of what are deemed to be appropriate and
acceptable forms of expression. Clearly, violence is also part and parcel of the engagement
between state and civil society actors, as the recent histories of assassination, state repression,
street clashes, and open warfare in Bolivia, Chiapas, and Guatemala (among others) have shown.
This suggests that the struggle for equality and rights within democratic contexts may not be
Ethnographic studies such as these point to the many ways in which violence is deeply
intertwined with democracy in Latin America, such that the two must be understood in tandem,
rather than as two distinct points on a single evolutionary trajectory or as contradictory elements
of an ongoing teleology. These studies also point to democracy’s basic unevenness, the
inequitable distribution of citizenship rights in Latin American countries, and the role that
violence plays in implementing and challenging these inequities. In trying to understand the
at democracy “from below,” to understand the nature of people’s demands, the violent conditions
which they confront, and the sometimes violent responses they make to these conditions. Such a
perspective may yield rather surprising insights. For ultimately, and perhaps ironically, what
many social movements and individual social actors may be seeking is nothing short of the
democratic ideal – full inclusion in national democratic society, with equal access to rights and
justice for all citizens. In this sense, what they may be seeking is what anthropologist James
Holston has identified as “substantive citizenship:” not merely the voting rights that political
democracy confers (and which the democratization paradigm takes as its baseline measurement),
but the full range of social and economic rights that true polyarchy is said to guarantee. 80
The concept of violent pluralism thus inverts many of the assumptions of existing writing
on politics in Latin America. We are not interested, on face, with whether or not there are deficits
from a generally agreed upon standard of rights or political behavior. Moreover, we do not see
ongoing violence in Latin America as a reflection of anarchy, state breakdown, or the failure of
the rule of law. Rather we are concerned with what particular forms of order are built up in
polities in which multiple persistent violent actors operate. Who are these actors, how do they
interact, and what types of orders do they build? How do these interactions create new forms of
order such as networks of criminal governance or legal pluralism? By looking at the interactions
of multiple violent actors and trying to understand what order they create we provide a new
mode for studying politics in the region. Similarly, we are not concerned with deficits of
citizenship but, rather, with how citizenship and other forms of political subjectivity are built
among different segments of the population under pluraly violent conditions. Ultimately these
are much richer questions than those that can be asked under a paradigm that assumes certain
fixed understandings about institutions, order, violence, and modes of political participation.
Latin America does not live in a perpetual deficit of not being Europe or North America, and
there is no indication that the particular patterns of political arrangements that exist in these
countries are amenable to them becoming more like those “Northern” democracies. Indeed,
pluralist political practice in Latin America, as we have suggested, may very well depend on a
tolerance for privatized violence and ongoing abuses of large segments of the population. These
80J. Holston, “Spaces of Insurgent Citizenship.” In Cities and Citizenship. J. Holston, ed. (Durham, Duke
University Press, 1999), pp. 155-176.
are unique forms of political practice, order, and subjectivity that need to be studied on their own
terms.
All of this is not to say, of course, that there are not sites in the region where police seem
to function effectively, where crime is relatively under control even by Northern standards, and
where a normal rule of law appears operate. Indeed, O’Donnell has called these places “blue
areas,” and contrasts them with “green” and “brown areas” where there are progressively greater
deficits on central order and effective national administration of justice. These areas, however,
fit within the broader constraints of the concepts we develop in this volume. Some parts of Latin
American polities do operate under conditions that we might consider similar to those which we
believe exist in Europe and North America. Much of the South Zone of Rio de Janeiro, the
northern part of Bogotá, and parts of Uptown Kingston are not apparently excessively exposed to
illegal armed non-state actors, police can be relied upon to conduct reasonable investigations,
and the legal system may provide reasonable and timely adjudication of criminal matters and
civil disputes. These areas do, however, often concentrate a high degree of private security
measures, as Teresa Caldeira has observed in better-off parts of São Paulo, that have substantial
affects on how the population conceptualizes the polity, public space, civic and political
participation, and their own political subjectivity. But even if this were not the case the existence
of these types of places would not be inconsistent with our argument. Our notion of violent
pluralism includes the idea that state security forces do operate and will operate as expected
under some circumstances. This functioning is, however, simply another element of violent
pluralism. In some places the state does effectively maintain order. These spaces of more
discrete order are, however, critical to the functioning of these types of political regimes.
Emerald dealers, the owners of weapons factories, those shipping drugs, and even small gangs
trying to get access to state patronage need certain parts of the political system to operate within
a more formal rule of law in order to maintain working port facilities, have functioning financial
system to provide loans and guarantee deposits, and to make sure a state budget is generate with
access to international financing that can support different types of patronage. In other words,
even when we see supposed “blue areas” of state functioning, these areas are deeply engaged
with other parts of the polity and often operate in ways that support more unorthodox systems of
This brings us to one last point about sites of order. Spread across the region are a
handful of states that experiences relatively lower levels of violence and which appear to
experience, over national territory, a functioning system of sanctioned violence. These countries
include Chile, Costa Rica, Cuba, Panama (outside of the Darien jungle where Colombian
guerillas operate freely), and Uruguay. A discussion of these countries is beyond the scope of
this project but we will note that the relatively lower levels of violence in these places stem from
particular local characteristics that have to do with the social and institutional history of each and
the particular ways these places are inserted into the international economy. Indeed, many of
the factors which we note contribute to violent pluralism in the cases discussed here operate in
slightly different ways in these countries leading to lower levels of violence and different
political conditions. For example, Argentina experiences comparatively low violence by global
standards but, as the chapters by Auyero and Stanley will demonstrate, these conditions of
relatively low violence operate in the context of a form of violent pluralism. It is also worth
noting that these are generally relatively small countries and the limited national territory
combined with a population that has easy access to the state may make it harder for certain types
from the types of problems we are discussing here. All that said, our purpose here is to describe
broad trends in violence countries in the region not to explain politics in low violence countries.
Of course, it is impossible to talk about politics in Latin America without talking about
democracy. It has been the political project of the entire continent for the last generation, every
country, even Cuba, claims it as its form of government, and it dominates academic and political
discourse about the region. It is not our intention here to say either that democracy does not exist
in Latin America or that we should not study democracy in Latin America. Rather, the purpose
of this introductory chapter has been to attempt to open a “parenthesis” in which students of
politics can critically consider the state of the political regimes in Latin America without the
weight of the democratization project permeating the analysis. Within this parenthesis we can
consider, counter to conventional political science, the actual condition of Latin America’s
political regimes amidst and in concert with the various forms of political and social violence
that characterize Latin American national societies. The questions and modes of analysis that we
lay out in the previous sections of this chapter provide tools that can enable scholars to assess
Latin American political society without assuming a priori the political project and the language
The chapters that follow serve to deepen and extend the arguments laid out in this
introduction. Drawing on detailed case studies from a variety of countries throughout the region
81This is extremely important in light of recent work on “conditional authoritarianism” that looks at how otherwise
repressive regimes employ electoral mechanisms to achieve political ends without extending broad rights to the
population; see S. Levitsky and L. Way, “The Rise of Competitive Authoritarianism,” Journal of Democracy 13 no.
2 (2002), pp. 51-65.
(from the Andes and Brazil to Central America, the Southern Cone to the Hispanic Caribbean)
and from a range of academic disciplines (including anthropology, history, political science and
sociology), the chapters explore the multitude forms in which violence manifests itself as part
and parcel of contemporary Latin American democracy. Some of the chapters provide clear and
introduction; others expand upon these outlines to contribute their own disciplinary or cross-
disciplinary insights.82
Drawing on evidence from her research in Mexico, Diane Davis’ chapter offers an
important historical framing for the conceptual work provided by our introduction. As Davis
points out, the initial enthusiasm with which politicians, citizens, and academic analysts of Latin
America greeted the spread of political and economic liberalization throughout the region in the
1980s and 1990s has now been replaced by anxiety and fear, as violence and insecurity continue
to characterize post-authoritarian societies. “Forget big ideas about democracy and how electoral
rules of the game will lead to improvement in people’s every day lives” – as Davis observes,
ordinary citizens today are much more concerned with creating security on their own terms,
often bypassing the state and its democratic institutions and opting for more localized, violent
measures of control that seem to promise more immediate returns. At the same time, organized
groups of violent “mafias,” often performing state-like functions, and often with the
collaboration of police and military officials, have emerged as power brokers within or alongside
of democratic states. Davis’ chapter provides the vital historical context within which these
sundry forms of violent organization and practice can be understood within the realities of
contemporary democracy. Why, Davis asks, has the transition to democracy not been
82A particular deficiency of the present volume is its lack of a chapter that specifically addresses Central America.
The editors recognize the limitations that this lacuna imposes on our analysis.
accompanied by a transition away from the violent and coercive practices of the non-democratic
past? And how has this past laid the foundation for the kinds of violent democracies that we
observe in Latin America today? The answers to these questions, according to Davis, lie in past
decisions about economic development, state formation and industrialization in the region,
requiring us to place contemporary democracy within the context of this longer trajectory for it
to be understood.
Historian Mary Roldán’s chapter examines the intertwined relations between democracy
and violence in Colombia, a formally democratic nation that nevertheless “has spent a not
insignificant portion of the last four decades under states of siege or some form of political
constraint.” In concert with themes raised consistently throughout this volume, Roldán asks of
Colombian democracy, “Is it possible that violence is both constitutive of and the product of
pluralism, in which the constant threat or experience of violence jeopardizes local efforts to live
peacefully and defend basic rights. Interestingly, though, as Roldán observes, violence in this
case has not necessarily eroded local people’s confidence in democracy or the democratic state;
rather, violence here motivates previously unorganized citizens to join together to create
democracy, even as this action brings local definitions of democracy into conflict with “official”
offers a consideration of Colombia’s violent democracy – an apt case for analyzing this apparent
democracies in Latin America. In some violent democracies, the ties between formal state
institutions and violent entities are subtle and covert; in Colombia, as Ramirez’s chapter clearly
demonstrates, the relationships between official state and non-official, illegal, violent groups are
tightly woven and multiply configured. Especially in the so-called “marginal” regions of the
country, an “alternative social order” has been established in which violent non-state actors (i.e.,
guerrillas and paramilitaries) have taken control of the regions, a control maintained through
their various ties with local and state political officials. Within this alternative order, antagonistic
to but at the same time affiliated with the democratic state, “security” has emerged as the
dominant paradigm of democratic rule, a paradigm whose hegemony is guaranteed by the forced
The chapters by Javier Auyero and Ruth Stanley both examine violence and democracy
in Buenos Aires, Argentina; but whereas Stanley’s chapter focuses on the experiences of
violence’s victims, Auyero, like Ramírez, is interested in its perpetrators, be they legal or illegal,
legal and illegal political actors, and their critical role in the making of collective violence.
Auyero’s chapter uses the case of the 2001 food riots in Argentina to examine the diverse ways
in which covert and often unrecognized links between members of the polity – from politicians
to activists to perpetrators of street violence – shape the emergence, manifestations, and diffusion
of collective violence. Perhaps more significant is Auyero’s recognition that political elites may
oftentimes themselves be the perpetrators of violence: Beyond simply tolerating the use of
violence to achieve political ends, in Buenos Aires (as elsewhere) elites deploy violent tactics, or
call upon their allies to do so, in the pursuit of ostensibly democratic objectives. In a similar vein,
Stanley’s chapter engages the question of police impunity in Buenos Aires, focusing on the
experience of the victims of illegal police violence and their efforts to organize and confront it.
Stanley’s analysis reveals the complexities and contradictions of a democratic system in which
those authorized to use legal violence likewise function as illegal violent actors, calling into
focus the potential consequences for democratic stability when state institutions are unable or
unwilling to restrict the use of violence and coercive state power. These chapters are particularly
interesting in that they investigate the problem of violent pluralism in the context of what has
been seen as a low-violence country until now. They show that while levels of violence may not
be as high here countries with relatively low levels of conflict can still experience many of the
state political processes of violent pluralism and countries with higher rates of violence.
The chapters by Lilean Bobea and Robert Gay also wrestle with the question of impunity
and, like many others in this volume, respond to our call in this introduction for a scholarship
that explores the connections between violent democratic states and the lived realities of citizens
of those states. Bobea and Gay both highlight the connections between levels of abstraction often
identified as the “micro” and the “macro,” to understand daily life within broader forms of
national and transnational organization and practice. Bobea’s chapter, for example, begins with
an ethnographic description of the experiences of poor residents of Santo Domingo and Santiago
in the Dominican Republic, who live with criminal and state violence on a daily basis; the
chapter then moves to a “macro-level” consideration of the state’s “Plan for Democratic
Security,” a proposal to “reorganize the public sector and rebuild society” in the fight against
illegal violence. The extent to which “security” programs open the door to further violence,
albeit of the democratic variety, is an important consideration here. Similarly, Gay examines
local violence in Rio de Janeiro within the context of a transnational political economy of drug
trafficking, demonstrating the extensive complicity of police and other authorities in the very
violence and illegality they are supposed to combat. Both of these chapters, like others in this
volume (Auyero and Roldán come particularly to mind) also demonstrate the need for scholars
engaged in the study of contemporary democracies to employ a variety of methods in their work.
The macro-historical and structural analyses of history, sociology and political science combine
usefully with the more ethnographic techniques of anthropology to provide these scholars access
In many ways Latin America lies at the crossroads of the developed and developing
worlds. While it has some things in common institutionally with the political and economic
systems of Western Europe and North America, in terms of how political institutions function
and how force is deployed in society Latin America has much more in common with Africa, the
former Soviet Republics, and Central Asia. In his broadly synthetic contribution to this volume,
Todd Landman brings the perspective of comparative politics to his analysis of the conjuncture
between violence and democracy in Latin America, and its impact on human rights in the region.
Systematizing what are often loosely deployed concepts, Landman offers a typology that
distinguishes usefully between legal and illegal forms of violence, and between state and non-
anthropologists and other more typically qualitative analysts, serves to clarify exactly who are
the violent actors within Latin American democracies, and how violence identified as legal or
“legitimate” coexists with other forms that lie beyond the pale. Additionally, as Landman goes
typically associated with democracy.” This kind of analysis moves us beyond the tendency to
pile ever more adjectives in front of “democracy,” instead facilitating an objective analysis of the
extent to which any so-called democracy serves to guarantee the basic rights of its citizens.
Landman’s analysis provides a framework for interpreting the varieties of violent practice
As many of the chapters in this volume suggest, if we begin to reorient how we study
politics in Latin America we can also begin to think seriously about the scope and dimensions of
reforms or more radical changes that are necessary to actually achieve something like polyarchy.
By looking beyond political institutions and taking seriously the idea that some current political
regimes in Latin America may not be able to move toward wide guarantees of basic rights, we
can begin to think about what type of institutional and non-institutional framework may lead to
polyarchy. Do countries, for example, need a different orientation to international trade flows
which contribute so much to the drugs and arms trades in order to create governments more
capable of protecting their populations? Alternatively, as we begin to understand more about the
relationships that governments maintain to other types of violent actors operating in a polity, we
can develop an understanding about what types of networks of relations between the state and
other violent actors succeed in transmitting basic protections to residents. Most importantly, if
we do not critically assess the notion that the existing regimes can move in this direction we can
never determine what type of extra-institutional changes might be necessary to more effectively
In the conclusion Arias ties together the various strands of argument in the volume through a
discussion of the origins, operation, and solutions to the challenges posed by violent pluralism.
The conclusion offers a discussion of future research needs on these issues in Latin America and
the policy implications of the approach we offer. In the end the conclusion seeks not so much to
close the volume but rather to open up space for an ongoing discussion of the issues discussed in
the volume.
This project does not pretend to offer a rigorous proof of violent pluralism as the
exclusive model for understanding political systems in Latin America. Rather, by offering
detailed examinations of the practice and politics of violence in a number of countries in the
region, this volume offers a theoretical exploration of the challenges facing the region that
should help to open conceptual space through which we can understand in a more nuanced and
sophisticated way the challenges facing these polities and their inhabitants. By adopting a more
critical approach towards our understanding of regime change and efforts to build democracy, by
moving beyond the democratization paradigm, we, as Latin Americanists and comparativists, can
more effectively contribute to the some of the larger policy debates that exist today. Since the
second Clinton Administration, US foreign policy has officially been driven by the “democratic
peace” theory, which claims that the world will be a safer place for the US if there are more
democracies since democracies do not go to war with each other. 83 To this end both the Clinton
and the Bush Administrations, in very different ways, have officially worked to build democracy
in far-flung parts of the world. The debacle of democracy building in Iraq and the resonance of
that experience with ongoing problems of social violence in Latin America highlights an
important contribution that Latin Americanists could have made to this debate. By taking
seriously the idea of violent pluralism and by broadening our conception of how to study the
elective regimes that predominate in Latin America we can not only begin to contribute in a
83On the democratic peace see M. Doyle, “Liberalism and World Politics,” American Political Science Review 80
no. 4 (1986), pp. 1151-1169.
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