Skip to product information
1 of 1

Police Reform in Mexico

Regular price $60.00
Sale price $60.00 Regular price $60.00
Sale Sold out
In this book, Sabet explores how incentives in Mexican politics, organized crime, and a distrustful relationship between police and citizens have combined to prevent meaningful police reform in Mex...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 02 May 2012
View Product Details

The urgent need to professionalize Mexican police has been recognized since the early 1990s, but despite even the most well-intentioned promises from elected officials and police chiefs, few gains have been made in improving police integrity.

Why have reform efforts in Mexico been largely unsuccessful? This book seeks to answer the question by focusing on Mexico's municipal police, which make up the largest percentage of the country's police forces. Indeed, organized crime presents a major obstacle to institutional change, with criminal groups killing hundreds of local police in recent years. Nonetheless, Daniel Sabet argues that the problems of Mexican policing are really problems of governance. He finds that reform has suffered from a number of policy design and implementation challenges. More importantly, the informal rules of Mexican politics have prevented the continuity of reform efforts across administrations, allowed patronage appointments to persist, and undermined anti-corruption efforts.

Although many advances have been made in Mexican policing, weak horizontal and vertical accountability mechanisms have failed to create sufficient incentives for institutional change. Citizens may represent the best hope for counterbalancing the toxic effects of organized crime and poor governance, but the ambivalent relationship between citizens and their police must be overcome to break the vicious cycle of corruption and ineffectiveness.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $60.00
Pages: 296
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford Politics and Policy
Publication Date: 02 May 2012
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780804778657
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

"Mexico's war on drugs has brought intense international attention to that country, and Police Reform in Mexico directs that attention toward a realistic assessment of the reforms, laws, and mechanisms used to fight it . . . Although Mexico is mired in one of Latin America's biggest battles against crime, this book shows what a critical case it is for comparative analysis . . . The book's detailed description of Mexico's steady progress, even in the midst of a war that has killed tens of thousands of people, shows that even the strongest of barriers does not consign reform to failure."
Daniel Sabet is a visiting researcher at Georgetown University's Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service. Previously, he coordinated rule of law educational programs for police throughout Latin America as part of the Culture of Lawfulness Project. He is the author of Nonprofits and their Networks: Cleaning the Waters along Mexico's Northern Border.