117,99 zł
The Mexican drug cartel is not simply an enemy of the state — in many regions, it has become the state. From municipal police forces to federal ministries, from local mayors to military commanders, the penetration of cartel money and influence into Mexican governance represents one of the most sustained institutional failures in modern Latin American history. It did not happen overnight, and it did not happen by force alone. This book traces the methodical architecture of cartel corruption — how organizations like Sinaloa and CJNG identified vulnerabilities in underpaid bureaucracies, exploited political transition periods, and converted law enforcement from adversaries into assets. It examines landmark cases where governors, generals, and federal police chiefs were found on cartel payrolls, and what those cases revealed about the structural conditions that made betrayal not just possible but rational. Drawing on court records, anti-corruption commission findings, and investigative reporting from Mexican journalists who risked their lives to document it, this is a systemic analysis of how criminal organizations exploit weak institutions — and why dismantling corruption requires more than prosecuting individuals.
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Liczba stron: 204
Rok wydania: 2026
