This book challenges the quasi-consensus that Latin American countries
dominate global homicide rankings mainly due to the illegal nature of
drug production and trafficking. Building on US scholarship that looks
at the role of social exclusion and discriminatory policing in drug
violence, the authors of this volume show that the association between
illegality and violence cannot be divorced from the inequality that
prevails in those countries. This book looks in detail at the
functioning of drug markets in Recife, the largest metropolitan area in
Brazil's North-East and, over the last 25 years, the heart of the
country's most violent metropolitan area. Building on extensive
interviews and field work, the authors map out the city's drug markets
and explore the reasons why some of those markets are violent, and
others are not. The analysis focuses on the micromechanics of each
market, looking at consumption patterns and at the workings of retail
sales and distribution. Such a systematic micro-level comparative
analysis of the workings of Latin American drug markets is simply not
available elsewhere in current literature. These findings point to
significant gaps in current understandings of the link between illegal
markets and violence, and they illuminate the need to factor in the way
in which those markets are nested in exclusionary social contexts.