Why do some state crackdowns succeed, while others exacerbate state-cartel conflict?
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 

CISSR SPOTLIGHT

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

New Book Launch:

Spanish translation of Benjamin

Lessing’s Making Peace in Drug Wars now available

 
 
 

 State leaders often crack down on cartels in an effort to restore rule of law—but why do some crackdowns succeed, while others exacerbate conflict? In Making Peace in Drug WarsCISSR Faculty Fellow Benjamin Lessing investigated this question by leveraging data from 30 years of cartel-related conflict in Colombia, Brazil, and Mexico.

 

On November 24, CISSR hosted a launch event to celebrate the publication of the Spanish-language translation of Making Peace in Drug Wars. The Spanish-language event featured a conversation with Lessing, Angélica Durán, and Daniel Mejía and was co-hosted with the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of Chicago and the Centro de Estudios Sobre Seguridad y Drogas at the Universidad de los Andres. The Spanish-language translation is available open-access until December 21.


 
 
 
 

UPCOMING EVENTS

 
 
 
  
 
 

December 1

Center for East Asian Studies, Seminary Co-op, and Contemporary China Series

East Asia By the Book! Toxic Politics: China’s Environmental Health Crisis and its Challenge to the Chinese State

4:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society

Neubauer Collegium Directors’ Lecture | Embracing a Complicated Relationship: Indigenous Museum Practices

5:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

December 3

CEERES Area Studies Showcase Lecture Series

Utopia’s Discontents: Russian Émigrés and the Quest for Freedom

1:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society

Data Feminism: VUE Data Visualization Symposium

2:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

Committee on Southern Asia Studies

Nightingales and Falcons: Iqbal’s Ghazals Between Persian and Urdu

5:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

Stigler Center for the Study of the Economy and the State

The Rebirth of Hong Kong’s Rule of Law

6:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

December 4

CISSR Empires & Atlantics Forum

The Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina and John Locke’s Transatlantic Legacies

12:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
   
 

December 5

The Pozen Family Center for Human Rights in partnership with the Center for Middle Eastern Studies and the Center for East European and Russian/Eurasian Studies

What Just Happened in Nagorno-Karabakh: Déjà vu or Political Trend?

12:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 
  
 
 

December 8

Chicago Center for Teaching

Translating Lessons on Remote and Hybrid Teaching to the Winter: A Faculty Panel for the Humanities and Social Sciences

CISSR Faculty Board Member Paul Poast

1:30pm Live Stream

Registration is required.


 
 

December 10

Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society

Scale, Sustainability, and Democracy: Comparing Agricultural Transformations in the US and Europe in the 20th and 21st Centuries

10:30am Live Stream

Registration is required. Event continues until 3:00pm on December 11.


 
 

CEERES Area Studies Showcase Lecture Series

The Cold War From the Margins: Socialist Bulgaria on the Global Cultural Scene

1:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

December 11

CEERES Deglobalization and Anti-Globalism in Central Europe Conference

Deglobalization and the Politics of Self-Sufficiency

12:30pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

December 15

The Oriental Institute

Exploring the 19th-Century Photographs of Antoin Sevruguin in the OI Museum

5:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 
  
 
 

December 1

Comparative Politics Workshop

Persistent Inequality: Mobility and Intergenerational Redistribution

12:30pm, Live Stream


 
 

African Studies Workshop

Unexpected Callings: The Rediscovery of Ancestral Spiritualities Among Queer Zimbabweans

5:30pm, Live Stream


 
 

December 2

History and Theory of Capitalism Workshop

Reading Rostow in a Rhodesian Prison: Anti-colonialism and the Reinvention of Modernization in British Central Africa

4:30pm, Live Stream


 
 

December 3

East Asia: Transregional Histories

Acupuncture Anesthesia on American Bodies: Communism, Race, and the Cold War in the Making of ‘Legitimate’ Medical Science

3:30pm, Live Stream


 
   
 

Latin American History Workshop & Workshop on Latin America and the Caribbean

El intelectual y la revolución: semánticas de un rol en América Latina (1959-1976)

5:00pm, Live Stream


 
 

Transnational Approaches to Modern Europe Workshop

The Second Scramble for East Africa: The Ambiguities of Mandate Sovereignty and the Anglo-American Struggle for Demographic Domination in Tanganyika

4:30pm, Live Stream


 
 

Politics, History, and Society Workshop

The Consumer Movement and Consumer Collective Identity

4:20pm, Live Stream


 
 

Please note: Workshops are scholarly communities that pre-circulate papers. They meet regularly throughout the year and are generally not open to the public.

 
   
 
 
 

AROUND TOWN & DOWN THE ROAD

 
 
   
 

December 1

Brown University Watson Institute of International & Public Affairs

Global Anti-Black Racism Series: Antiracism Without Races

11:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

Indiana University Lugar School of Global and International Studies

Building Sustainable Futures: The Pitfalls and Potential of International Cooperation

12:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

Northwestern University Weinberg College for International & Area Studies

Governing the Urban in China and India: A Talk by Xuefei Ten

3:30pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

December 4

The Chicago Council on Global Affairs

World Review with Erlanger, Luce, and Toosi

10:00am, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

The University of Michigan Center for Southeast Asian Studies

What Kind of Ecological Culture Do We Need?: Drought History and Lessons From Premodern Southeast Asia

11:00am, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
   
 

December 9

Indiana University Lugar School of Global and International Studies

Parasite Organizations: What the Evolution of Direct Sales Marketing in Russia Can Tell Us About Contemporary Capitalism

1:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

December 10

Northwestern University Department of Political Science

Antiracism in Thought and Action Speaker Series: Racial Politics After the 2020 Election

12:30pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

Indiana University Lugar School of Global and International Studies

Refugee: the Uses of a Policy Category in Ecuador’s Educational Settings w/ Diana Rodriguez Gomez

3:30pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

The University of Michigan Center for Japanese Studies

Art & Activism in Postwar Japan: The Antiwar Art of Shikoku Gorō

11:00am, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 

December 15

Northwestern University Buffet Institute of International Affairs

Building Sustainable Futures: The Schematic State

12:00pm, Live Stream

Registration is required


 
 
 
 

NEWS & RESEARCH ROUNDUP

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Foreign policy under Biden: Paul Poast weighs in


In a recent interview with UChicago News, CISSR Faculty Board member Paul Poast considers the foreign policy changes we can anticipate under a Biden administration. According to Professor Poast, rejoining the Paris Climate Agreement, the Iran nuclear deal, and the World Health Organization do not require Congressional support and will likely occur soon after Biden assumes office. We can also expect major changes on U.S. immigration policy, including a stop to the wall on the U.S.-Mexico border. On other issues, such as the U.S.’s China policy, Biden is more likely to stick to the status quo. You can read the full interview here...


 
 
 
 
 
 

Implementing COVID-19 Restrictions in Indonesia: Public Trust & Legitimacy


For New Mandala, 2017-2018 CISSR Dissertation Fellow Sana Jaffrey writes about the role of neighborhood associations in implementing COVID-19 restrictions in Indonesia. While neighborhood leaders enjoy a high level of public trust, concerns about legitimacy limit their ability to successfully implement COVID-19 policies. Moreover, while neighborhood leaders play an important role in enforcing such policies, their efforts are no replacement for an effective governmental implementation and realization of public health policies. Read more here...


 
 
 
 
 
 

Michael Albertus speaks to Vox about U.S.

election results


To what extent can Donald Trumps efforts to undermine U.S. election results constitute an attempted coup? For Vox, 2019-2020 CISSR Faculty Fellow Michael Albertus considers how Trumps actions compare to the challenges endured by democratic institutions in Latin America. He concludes that coup is the wrong termbut that we should remain alarmed about the threat that Trumps rhetoric poses to U.S. democracy. Read more here...


 
 

To suggest an item for a future digest, please send details via this submission form.

 
 
  
 
 
 


 
 

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT


 
 
 
 
 
 

Secrets in Global Governance

 
 

Can equipping international organizations with effective confidentiality systems increase international cooperation? 2020-2021 CISSR Faculty Fellow Austin Carson responds to this question with co-author Allison Carnegie in their book Secrets of Global Governance. In collaboration with the Seminary Co-op, CISSR recently hosted a virtual discussion on the book with the authors and Faculty Board member Paul Poast. You can watch the full conversation here.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 

This is CISSR’s final digest for the autumn quarter. We will return with additional research updates and events in January. We wish our CISSR community a safe and happy winter break!

 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
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