The “Dark Side” of Community Ties: Collective Action and Lynching in Mexico

Enzo Nussio
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Abstract

Lynching remains a common form of collective punishment for alleged wrongdoers in Latin America, Africa, and Asia today. Unlike other kinds of collective violence, lynching is usually not carried out by standing organizations. How do lynch mobs overcome the high barriers to violent collective action? I argue that they draw on local community ties to compensate for a lack of centralized organization. Lynch mobs benefit from solidarity and peer pressure, which facilitate collective action. The study focuses on Mexico, where lynching is prevalent and often amounts to the collective beating of thieves. Based on original survey data from Mexico City and a novel lynching event dataset covering the whole of Mexico, I find that individuals with more ties in their communities participate more often in lynching, and municipalities with more highly integrated communities have higher lynching rates. As community ties and lynching may be endogenously related, I also examine the posited mechanisms and the causal direction. Findings reveal that municipalities exposed to a recent major earthquake—an event that tends to increase community ties—subsequently experienced increased levels of lynching. Importantly, I find that interpersonal trust is unrelated to lynching, thus showing that different aspects of social capital have diverging consequences for collective violence, with community ties revealing a “dark side.”
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社区纽带的 "阴暗面":墨西哥的集体行动和私刑
如今,在拉丁美洲、非洲和亚洲,私刑仍然是对被指控的不法分子进行集体惩罚的一种常见形式。与其他类型的集体暴力不同,私刑通常不是由常设组织实施的。私刑暴民如何克服暴力集体行动的高障碍?我认为,他们利用当地社区的联系来弥补中央组织的不足。私刑暴民得益于团结和同伴压力,这有利于集体行动。本研究的重点是墨西哥,那里私刑盛行,通常相当于集体殴打小偷。基于墨西哥城的原始调查数据和覆盖整个墨西哥的新型私刑事件数据集,我发现与社区有更多联系的个人更频繁地参与私刑,而社区高度融合的城市私刑发生率更高。由于社区联系和私刑可能存在内生关系,我还研究了假定的机制和因果方向。研究结果表明,最近发生大地震的城市--这一事件往往会增加社区联系--私刑发生率随之上升。重要的是,我发现人际信任与私刑无关,从而表明社会资本的不同方面会对集体暴力产生不同的影响,而社区联系则揭示了 "阴暗面"。
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