Search
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Division
Browse By Session or Event Type
Virtual Exhibit Hall
Search Tips
How to Build a Personal Program
Virtual Exhibit Hall
Personal Schedule
Change Preferences / Time Zone
Session Submission Type: Paper Session
This mini-conference brings together scholars of organized crime and comparative political behavior to examine how citizens form political attitudes and engage in political behaviors in response to both organized crime and common crime. Moving beyond top-down analyses of state-criminal relationships, this event focuses on bottom-up societal responses, political attitude formation, and civic engagement patterns that emerge from lived experiences with different forms of criminality.
3:25pm |
Expansion Is Not Conquest: The Tren de Aragua and the Politics of Criminal Expansion in the Americas - Oscar Alvaro-Montes, University of Massachusetts, Lowell
3:33pm |
From Conventional Rebels to Criminalized Insurgencies? Tracing the Process of Criminalization of FARC Splinter Groups in Post-accord Colombia - Sebastian Tobon Palma, University of Illinois Chicago
3:41pm |
The Many Forms of Political Violence: A Family Resemblance Framework - Nacho Borba, University of Illinois Chicago; Inés Fynn, Universidad Catolica del Uruguay; Nicolas Taccone, Brown University
3:49pm |
Political Violence as a Vocation: How Politicians Shape Citizens’ Demand for Repression - Natan Ezequiel Skigin, Princeton University; Yanilda Maria Gonzalez, Harvard University
3:57pm |
The Transition Paradox: How Guerrilla Organizations Lose Their Way in Politics - María Ignacia Ignacia Curiel, Stanford University
4:05pm |
TITLE TBD - Abby Cordova, University of Notre Dame
4:13pm |
Lucia Tiscornia, University College Dublin
4:13pm |
Juan Carlos Angulo, Universidad Iberoamericana
4:21pm |
Audience participation will last for the remainder of the session.