(In)Security and Self-Government: Lessons from the Mexican Experience

C. Correa, Carlos De la Rosa Xochitiotzi
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Abstract

Abstract Using the Mexican experience in the centralization of public security, this paper proposes federalism as a model of a vertical control of powers and, more importantly, a way of promoting self-governance, citizen participation and, through them, local security. We argue that while federalism as an organizational model of the State does not guarantee self-governance or citizen participation, it can help promote them and through their enhancement, improve security at the community level. Since 2006, the Mexican government has implemented a security strategy that has increasingly centralized public security decisions. The strategy relies on the deployment of federal security forces (Army, Navy and Federal Police) across the country, to replace or support state and local police. The results have been mostly negative. On one hand, there has been an exacerbation of violence in the country, including many incidents in which violence was used disproportionately or illegally by state officials against civilians. On the other, the use of federal forces has undermined the federalist regime which serves as a check on the exercise of power by federal authorities, thus undermining state and local institutional capacities. The lessons from the Mexican case can be useful for other federal systems responding to organized crime.
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安全与自治:墨西哥经验的教训
摘要本文借鉴墨西哥公共安全集中化的经验,提出联邦制是一种纵向控制权力的模式,更重要的是,它是一种促进自治、公民参与并通过它们促进地方安全的方式。我们认为,虽然联邦制作为国家的一种组织模式并不能保证自治或公民参与,但它可以帮助促进自治或公民参与,并通过加强自治和公民参与来改善社区层面的安全。自2006年以来,墨西哥政府实施了一项日益集中公共安全决策的安全战略。该战略依赖于在全国部署联邦安全部队(陆军、海军和联邦警察),以取代或支持州和地方警察。结果大多是负面的。一方面,该国的暴力加剧,包括国家官员对平民不成比例或非法使用暴力的许多事件。另一方面,使用联邦部队破坏了作为对联邦当局行使权力的检查的联邦主义制度,从而破坏了州和地方机构的能力。墨西哥案件的经验教训对其他应对有组织犯罪的联邦系统是有用的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
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