Selective Security in the War on Drugs : The Coloniality of State Power in Colombia and Mexico - Alke Jenss

Selective Security in the War on Drugs

The Coloniality of State Power in Colombia and Mexico

By: Alke Jenss

Hardcover | 15 January 2023

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Paramilitaries, crime, and thousands of disappeared in official numbers - the so-called 'war on drugs' has perpetuated violence in parts of Latin America, at times precisely in regions of economic growth. Legal and illegal economy are difficult to distinguish. A failure of state institutions to provide security for its citizens does not sufficiently explain this. This book offers a detailed analysis of the role of the state in violence: To what extent and for whom do states produce order and disorder, by devising security policies within the 'fight against drugs'? Which social forces support and drive such policies?

This first comparative study of Colombian and Mexican security policies employs state theory and critical political economy to understand recent dynamics of violence in both contexts. It highlights how the 'war on drugs' has exacerbated contradictions driven by a particular economic model, and simultaneously resorts to discourses which criminalize precisely those that this model has radically disadvantaged.

Industry Reviews

Alke Jenss's book--which, through a systematic comparison between Colombia and Mexico, considers state and state policies as producers of violence in the context of the war on drugs--is bound to become a fundamental reference for state, Latin American, and violence scholars. Empirically rich and theoretically dense, it presents a convincing story about the ways in which global forces--the 'war on drugs, ' neoliberalism, etc.--interacted with post-colonial states and regional and local dynamics to produce specific power distributions and extraordinarily brutal outcomes.

--Francisco Guti?rrez San?n, Universidad Nacional de Colombia

Theoretically innovative and empirically detailed, this book offers a fresh take on the 'war on drugs' in Latin America. By asking, 'for whom do states produce order and disorder?' Alke Jenss reveals the classed, raced, and gendered social struggles that lie at the heart of contemporary security policies. This text stands as a vital contribution for understanding the basis of state violence in the region.

--Chris Hesketh, Oxford Brookes University

This book is an extraordinarily valuable contribution to our understanding of the failed 'war on drugs.' It provides new and theoretically sophisticated insights from both Colombia and Mexico and a fascinating focus on the role of the state security apparatuses and their selective deployment in reproducing colonial violence and capitalist extractivist imaginaries. This book succeeds in its ambitious combination of political economy analyses with decolonial ones.

--Julie Cupples, University of Edinburgh

Alke Jenss's book--which, through a systematic comparison between Colombia and Mexico, considers state and state policies as producers of violence in the context of the war on drugs--is bound to become a fundamental reference for state, Latin American, and violence scholars. Empirically rich and theoretically dense, it presents a convincing story about the ways in which global forces--the 'war on drugs, ' neoliberalism, etc.--interacted with post-colonial states and regional and local dynamics to produce specific power distributions and extraordinarily brutal outcomes.


Theoretically innovative and empirically detailed, this book offers a fresh take on the 'war on drugs' in Latin America. By asking, 'for whom do states produce order and disorder?' Alke Jenss reveals the classed, raced, and gendered social struggles that lie at the heart of contemporary security policies. This text stands as a vital contribution for understanding the basis of state violence in the region.


This book is an extraordinarily valuable contribution to our understanding of the failed 'war on drugs.' It provides new and theoretically sophisticated insights from both Colombia and Mexico and a fascinating focus on the role of the state security apparatuses and their selective deployment in reproducing colonial violence and capitalist extractivist imaginaries. This book succeeds in its ambitious combination of political economy analyses with decolonial ones.

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