Abstract
AbstractGangs are often associated with violence and chaos, but they can also be institutional vectors for the imposition of particular forms of social order, based on their members’ status as locally hegemonic “violence experts”. This “gang governance” is often exclusive and volatile, however, and its underlying logic can easily change. Instances of the latter are frequently connected to generational turnovers within gangs. An obvious question in this regard is how old and new gang members interact with each other, especially in circumstances where the rules and norms upheld by the latter become detrimental to the former. Drawing on longitudinal ethnographic research in barrio Luis Fanor Hernández, a poor neighbourhood in Managua, Nicaragua, this article explores the conflicts that emerged between different generations of gang members following the gang’s transformation from a vigilante self-defence group to a predatory drug-dealing organisation, and what these might mean for the notion of gang governance.
Funder
Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Law,Sociology and Political Science
Reference48 articles.
1. Arias, E. D. (2006). Drugs and democracy in Rio de Janeiro: Trafficking, social networks, and public security. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
2. Arias, E. D. (2017) Criminal enterprises and governance in Latin America and the Caribbean. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
3. Ayling, J. (2011). Gang change and evolutionary theory. Crime, Law and Social Change, 56(1), 1-26.
4. Bolden, C. (2013). Tales from the hood: An emic perspective on gang joining and gang desistance. Criminal Justice Review, 38(4), 473-490.
5. Brenneman, R. (2012). Homies and Hermanos: God and Gangs in Central America. Oxford: Oxford University Press.