Latin America has long suffered from extraordinarily high criminal violence. The intensified competition between Mexican Sinaloa Cartel and Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generación playing out across Latin America, as well as long unresolved internal drivers of criminality, have further pushed up crime rates. Even countries where previously violence was low, such as Chile and Uruguay, are experiencing new challenges, and countries such as Ecuador have become dramatic battlefields of the cartels, with violent criminality increasingly affecting politics and daily life. Meanwhile, Brazil’s criminal group, the Primeiro Comando da Capital, has graduated to the major league of Latin American criminal groups with global reach, increasingly intersecting not just with local gangs but also Mexican cartels as far away as West Africa and Europe. Security policies across the region are under strain.
On October 3, the Brookings Institution’s Initiative on Nonstate Armed Actors and the Centro de Políticas Estratégicas y Asuntos Globales of the Universidad de San Andrés hosted a discussion on crime developments and security policies in Argentina, Chile, Brazil, Uruguay, and Ecuador.
Audience Q&A followed the moderated discussion. Viewers submitted questions for speakers via email to [email protected] and via Twitter using #SouthAmericaCrime.
Agenda
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October 3
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Featured discussion
Diego Sanjurjo Coordinator of Focused Police Crime Prevention Strategies, Comprehensive Citizen Security Program - Ministry of Interior of Uruguay @dsanjurjogarciaAlberto Föhrig Director, Center for Strategic Policy and Global Affairs - Universidad de San Andrés @afohrigModerator
Vanda Felbab-Brown Director - Initiative on Nonstate Armed Actors, Co-Director - Africa Security Initiative, Senior Fellow - Foreign Policy, Strobe Talbott Center for Security, Strategy, and Technology @VFelbabBrown
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