Autores
Carlos Antonio Flores Pérez
Fecha de publicación
2018/7/4
Revista
Third World Thematics: A TWQ Journal
Volumen
3
Número
4
Páginas
513-531
Editor
Routledge
Descripción
Some Mexican scholars, like Salvador Maldonado-Aranda or Alfredo Zavaleta-Betancourt, have adopted the concept of ‘margins of the state’ to analyse different aspects of illegality and organised crime. By using this concept, they distance themselves from other theoretical approaches that consider illegality and organised crime as ‘dysfunctional’ features or shortcomings of the state. I argue that extending these approaches to their logical conclusion is useful in showing how they do not result from (nor are they placed in) the so-called ‘margins of the state’. I argue that, instead, they may reflect those states’ very core. I propose two new concepts to understand this core: on the one hand, hegemonic power network, which refers to the people who command the state institutions and their formal and informal regulation. On the other hand, institutional configuration for illicit purposes, which refers to the nomination of …
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