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- Mano Dura v. Uneasy Peace in El Salvador: Effects of Tough-on-Crime and . . .
Employing interrupted time series techniques, we took advantage of the repeated oscillation between mano dura and gang truce periods in El Salvador to compare homicide levels during these two approaches to violence reduction
- Did El Salvadors Gang Truce Lead to More Violence? - InSight Crime
El Salvador's gang truce may have provided a short-term reprieve from violence but ultimately added to the total death toll, researchers say
- Did El Salvador’s Gang Truce Lead to More Violence? — ¿Condujo la . . .
Rival gang leaders in El Salvador shake hands — Líderes de pandillas rivales en El Salvador se dan la mano In the latest of a series of academic articles, two scholars add to mounting evidence that gang truces may provide a short-term reprieve from violence but over time can add to the total death toll
- The Politics of Violence Reduction: Making and Unmaking the Salvadorean . . .
This paper analyses a government-facilitated truce, begun in 2012, between El Salvador's three principal street gangs Using field theory and securitisation theory, it maps the evolution of the truce, distinguishing between the three related processes of making the deal, keeping the truce, and resisting it It analyses the complex and intriguing political processes in which various actors
- El Salvadors Gang Truce: Positives And Negatives - InSight Crime
Barrio 18 Leader ‘Viejo Lin’ on El Salvador Gang Truce Barrio 18 leader Carlos Lechuga Mojica, alias “El Viejo Lin,” is one of the most prominent spokesmen for El Salvador’s gang truce InSight Crime co-director Steven Dudley spoke with Mojica in Cojutepeque prison in October 2012 about how the maras view the controversial peace process, which has resulted in a dramatic drop in El
- Negotiating With Gangs: Lessons From the 2012 Truce in El Salvador
Part II: The 2012 Gang Truce in El Salvador El Salvador is an intriguing case against which to test the assumptions of this theory not only because it remains one of the most violent countries in the world, but also for its remarkable, and partially successful, attempt to negotiate with its two largest gangs in 2012
- Should El Salvador Renew the Gang Truce? - InSight Crime
The conclusions of a recent study examining the outcomes of gang truces in Latin America suggest a new peace agreement between the Barrio 18 and MS13 in El Salvador may only lead to increased violence in the long term
- Government Responses to Gang Power: From Truce to War on Gangs in El . . .
The Politics of Violence Reduction: Making and Unmaking the Salvadorean Gang Truce Journal of Latin American Studies, 2019 This paper analyses a government-facilitated truce, begun in 2012, between El Salvador's three principal street gangs
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