gativereportingbackgroundswithsomecurrently,orinthepast,engagedinoverlapping professional roles. The topic is of significance because these groups have developed from drug trafficking organizations to transnational criminal entities operating not only in Mexico but increasingly in Central America, throughout the United States, and in other regions of the Western hemisphere, West Africa, and Asia. It is important to understand this process and to remember that Mexico did not always have cartels. Since their initial appearance in the late 1980s, they have greatly evolved with the preferred narcotics route into the U.S. shifting from Southern Florida to over the U.S. border via Mexico and with the subsequent dismantling of the major cartels found in Colombia in the 1990s. Cartel evolution has been influenced by numerous factors ranging from intentional and unintentional governmental policies and second order effects, through changes in illicit market preferences and flows, to cartel mergers, infighting, and innovations. Typically, forgotten events that have directly impacted the rise of cartels include the torture killing of DEA agent Enrique “Kiki” Camarena in Mexico in 1985, U.S. counter-narcotics efforts spearheaded by the DEA to track down those responsible, and the initial establishment of the ‘plaza system’ by Miguel Angel Felix Gallardo (“El Padrino”) in the 1987–1989 era as a defensive countermove against those efforts. The process of political transition in Mexico from an autocratic—seventy-year one party dominated system under the Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI)—to a democratic multiparty system beginning in 2000 further greatly influenced cartel evolution. Under the PRI, the major cartels in Mexico, each with their assigned territories (plazas) remained subordinate to a state whose officials and elite families quietly profited from the illicit narcotics trade. This relationship with the state drastically changed with the election of two Partido Accion Nacional (PAN) administrations under Vincente Fox (2000–2006) and then Felipe Calderon (2006–1012).
[1]
R. Bunker.
Epochal Change: War Over Social and Political Organization
,
1997,
The US Army War College Quarterly: Parameters.
[2]
C. Tilly.
Bringing the State Back In: War Making and State Making as Organized Crime
,
1985
.
[3]
P. Kan.
What We’re Getting Wrong About Mexico
,
2011,
The US Army War College Quarterly: Parameters.
[4]
K. P. Werrell,et al.
The Transformation Of War
,
1991
.
[5]
Fall Semester,et al.
Theory of International Relations
,
2012
.
[6]
J. Sullivan,et al.
Rethinking insurgency: criminality, spirituality, and societal warfare in the Americas
,
2011
.
[7]
P. Williams,et al.
Afterword: criminal violence in Mexico – a dissenting analysis
,
2010
.
[8]
T. Skocpol,et al.
Bringing the State Back In
,
1985
.
[9]
J. Mearsheimer.
The Tragedy of Great Power Politics
,
2002
.
[10]
K. Thompson,et al.
Politics Among Nations
,
1948
.
[11]
R. Bunker.
The Mexican Cartel Debate: As Viewed Through Five Divergent Fields of Security Studies
,
2011
.