Policing Democracy: Overcoming Obstacles to Citizen Security in Latin America

Hardback Published on: 03/05/2011
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Synopsis

2011 Winner of the Charles H. Levine Memorial Book Prize of the International Political Science Association

Latin America's crime rates are astonishing by any standard-the region's homicide rate is the world's highest. This crisis continually traps governments between the need for comprehensive reform and the public demand for immediate action, usually meaning iron-fisted police tactics harking back to the repressive pre-1980s dictatorships.

In Policing Democracy, Mark Ungar situates Latin America at a crossroads between its longstanding form of reactive policing and a problem-oriented approach based on prevention and citizen participation. Drawing on extensive case studies from Argentina, Bolivia, and Honduras, he reviews the full spectrum of areas needing reform: criminal law, policing, investigation, trial practices, and incarceration.

Finally, Policing Democracy probes democratic politics, power relations, and regional disparities of security and reform to establish a framework for understanding the crisis and moving beyond it.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • ISBN: 9780801898020
  • Number of pages: 389
  • Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 32 mm
  • Weight: 680g
  • Languages: English