Narco-State

ebook The Battle for Mexico's Sovereignty

By Roberto Miguel Rodriguez

cover image of Narco-State

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Narco-State: The Battle for Mexico's Sovereignty offers a penetrating and unflinching exploration of the alarming reality in which vast swathes of Mexican territory are no longer governed by the state, but by powerful and violent criminal organizations. This book investigates how drug cartels have evolved into de facto rulers in many regions—imposing laws, dispensing justice, collecting taxes, and replacing state authority with systems of fear, corruption, and dependency.

The book mentions the zones under cartel dominance, exposing the strategic control of border regions, ports, and drug-producing areas. It examines the erosion of state power, particularly where local governments have been infiltrated or captured by organized crime, and how the Mexican military's increasing role in domestic policing has failed to reverse this trend.

The narrative explores the human cost—how entire communities have become economically reliant on narco-economies, how journalists and civil society activists are silenced through threats and assassination, and how hundreds of thousands have been displaced, contributing to regional instability and northbound migration.

The book also scrutinizes the role of international dynamics, particularly the U.S. market's insatiable demand for narcotics and the flood of American weapons into cartel hands. It highlights how the so-called "Kingpin Strategy" has led to the fragmentation of once-powerful cartels into violent splinter groups, complicating efforts to restore order.

Finally, Narco-State poses the crucial question: Can Mexico reclaim its sovereignty? It outlines the reform efforts, both proposed and underway, that seek to restore public trust, rebuild institutions, and assert the rule of law in the face of one of the most serious internal challenges to a nation's territorial integrity in the modern Western Hemisphere.

Narco-State