TY - JOUR
T1 - Encountering Knowledge Production
T2 - The International Crisis Group and the Making of Mexico's Security Crisis
AU - Hochmüller, Markus
AU - Müller, Markus-Michael
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - After nearly seven years of ever-escalating violence related to the Mexican ‘war on drugs’, in 2013 Mexico entered the International Crisis Group’s (icg) ‘observatory’ of countries facing a violent crisis. In this article we critically interrogate this ‘Mexican turn’ of the icg, as well as its accompanying forms of crisis knowledge production. By applying analytical insights from critical policy analysis and postcolonial security studies, we highlight the Western-centrism embedded in the icg’s perspective on Mexico’s security crisis. In analysing this perspective on questions of drug trafficking, statehood and indigenous justice, we demonstrate how this Western-centrism produces a de-politicising and overly technocratic crisis narrative. The article concludes that, through its Western-centric ‘Mexican turn’, the icg has been able to reaffirm its standing as a uniquely influential and internationally recognised crisis expert by showcasing its awareness of newly emerging crisis situations, as well as its possession of the necessary crisis-solving expertise.
AB - After nearly seven years of ever-escalating violence related to the Mexican ‘war on drugs’, in 2013 Mexico entered the International Crisis Group’s (icg) ‘observatory’ of countries facing a violent crisis. In this article we critically interrogate this ‘Mexican turn’ of the icg, as well as its accompanying forms of crisis knowledge production. By applying analytical insights from critical policy analysis and postcolonial security studies, we highlight the Western-centrism embedded in the icg’s perspective on Mexico’s security crisis. In analysing this perspective on questions of drug trafficking, statehood and indigenous justice, we demonstrate how this Western-centrism produces a de-politicising and overly technocratic crisis narrative. The article concludes that, through its Western-centric ‘Mexican turn’, the icg has been able to reaffirm its standing as a uniquely influential and internationally recognised crisis expert by showcasing its awareness of newly emerging crisis situations, as well as its possession of the necessary crisis-solving expertise.
KW - International Crisis Group (icg)
KW - knowledge production
KW - Mexico
KW - critical policy analysis
KW - postcolonial security studies
KW - statehood
KW - policing
KW - indigenous justice
KW - International Crisis Group (icg)
KW - knowledge production
KW - Mexico
KW - critical policy analysis
KW - postcolonial security studies
KW - statehood
KW - policing
KW - indigenous justice
U2 - 10.1080/01436597.2014.924069
DO - 10.1080/01436597.2014.924069
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0143-6597
VL - 35
SP - 705
EP - 722
JO - Third World Quarterly
JF - Third World Quarterly
IS - 4
ER -