Making Sense of Violence in Latin America: Social Scientists and Networks of Expertise in Colombia and Mexico

Sebastián Rojas Cabal
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Abstract

The intensity and varied nature of violence in Latin America has confronted social scientists with an urgent object of study. This essay examines how, by studying different processes of violence, social scientists have become embedded in wider networks of expertise spanning across civil society and the state. By participating in these networks, Latin American students of violence have enacted important intellectual and political interventions. I examine how the expert commissions for the study of violence launched by the Colombian state in 1958 and 1987 made landmark contributions to Colombian social sciences and produced representations of the country’s past that amplified calls for the transformation of the political regime as it existed in the 1950s and 1980s. I also analyze how, by putting forth the concept of feminicide to describe the violence faced by women and girls in Mexico, feminist scholars opened the door for holding the state accountable for its inaction against these crimes, paving the way toward reshaping the country’s criminal code and the implementation of social policies that adequately protect women’s lives. Investigating these interventions in the context of wider networks of expertise evidences how the study of violence in Latin America has pushed social scientists out of the ivory tower, moving them to engage other social actors not only as informants but also as partners and allies.
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理解拉丁美洲的暴力:哥伦比亚和墨西哥的社会科学家和专家网络
拉丁美洲暴力的强度和多样性使社会科学家面临一个紧迫的研究对象。本文考察了社会科学家如何通过研究不同的暴力过程,融入跨越公民社会和国家的更广泛的专业知识网络。通过参与这些网络,拉丁美洲的暴力学生进行了重要的智力和政治干预。我考察了哥伦比亚政府在1958年和1987年发起的暴力研究专家委员会如何为哥伦比亚社会科学做出了里程碑式的贡献,并对该国的过去进行了再现,放大了20世纪50年代和80年代存在的政治体制转型的呼声。我还分析了女权主义学者如何通过提出“杀害女性”(feminicide)的概念来描述墨西哥妇女和女孩所面临的暴力行为,从而为政府对这些犯罪行为的不作为负责打开了大门,为重塑该国的刑法和实施充分保护妇女生命的社会政策铺平了道路。在更广泛的专业知识网络背景下调查这些干预措施,可以证明拉丁美洲的暴力研究如何推动社会科学家走出象牙塔,促使他们不仅作为线人,而且作为合作伙伴和盟友与其他社会行动者接触。
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