Criminal Partnerships: The Effects of Intervention Strategies on "Cartel Affiliated" Gangs

abstract: Mexican drug cartels have been a difficult group to get official data on because of the clandestine nature of their operations and the inherent dangers associated with any type of research on these groups. Due to the close relationship that the United States and Mexico share, the United St...

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Other Authors: Mora, Victor (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34807
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-348072018-06-22T03:06:30Z Criminal Partnerships: The Effects of Intervention Strategies on "Cartel Affiliated" Gangs abstract: Mexican drug cartels have been a difficult group to get official data on because of the clandestine nature of their operations and the inherent dangers associated with any type of research on these groups. Due to the close relationship that the United States and Mexico share, the United States being a heavy demander of illicit drugs and Mexico being the supplier or the transshipment point, research that sheds light on cartels and their effects is necessary in order to solve this problem. A growing concern is that cartels have been seeking to improve their international infrastructure. This could potentially be done by partnering with gangs located in the United States to help with the distribution of drugs. The author uses data from the 2009 and 2010 Arizona Gang Threat Assessment and three sets of analyses (dummy variable regression, change score, multinomial logistic) to shed light on the possible partnership between cartels and U.S. based gangs. Primarily using the varying level of intervention strategies practiced by police departments throughout the state of Arizona, this study is exploratory in nature, but attempts to find the effectiveness of intervention strategies on "cartel affiliated" gangs, as identified by federal authorities, and how police departments respond towards these same groups. With the current data, there was no significant evidence that suggests that intervention strategies were less effective on "cartel affiliated" gangs or that police departments were responsive towards these “affiliated” gangs. Dissertation/Thesis Mora, Victor (Author) Sweeten, Gary (Advisor) Wang, Xia (Committee member) Katz, Charles (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Criminology Gangs Mexican Drug Cartels Mexican Drug War eng 75 pages Masters Thesis Criminology and Criminal Justice 2015 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34807 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Criminology
Gangs
Mexican Drug Cartels
Mexican Drug War
spellingShingle Criminology
Gangs
Mexican Drug Cartels
Mexican Drug War
Criminal Partnerships: The Effects of Intervention Strategies on "Cartel Affiliated" Gangs
description abstract: Mexican drug cartels have been a difficult group to get official data on because of the clandestine nature of their operations and the inherent dangers associated with any type of research on these groups. Due to the close relationship that the United States and Mexico share, the United States being a heavy demander of illicit drugs and Mexico being the supplier or the transshipment point, research that sheds light on cartels and their effects is necessary in order to solve this problem. A growing concern is that cartels have been seeking to improve their international infrastructure. This could potentially be done by partnering with gangs located in the United States to help with the distribution of drugs. The author uses data from the 2009 and 2010 Arizona Gang Threat Assessment and three sets of analyses (dummy variable regression, change score, multinomial logistic) to shed light on the possible partnership between cartels and U.S. based gangs. Primarily using the varying level of intervention strategies practiced by police departments throughout the state of Arizona, this study is exploratory in nature, but attempts to find the effectiveness of intervention strategies on "cartel affiliated" gangs, as identified by federal authorities, and how police departments respond towards these same groups. With the current data, there was no significant evidence that suggests that intervention strategies were less effective on "cartel affiliated" gangs or that police departments were responsive towards these “affiliated” gangs. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Criminology and Criminal Justice 2015
author2 Mora, Victor (Author)
author_facet Mora, Victor (Author)
title Criminal Partnerships: The Effects of Intervention Strategies on "Cartel Affiliated" Gangs
title_short Criminal Partnerships: The Effects of Intervention Strategies on "Cartel Affiliated" Gangs
title_full Criminal Partnerships: The Effects of Intervention Strategies on "Cartel Affiliated" Gangs
title_fullStr Criminal Partnerships: The Effects of Intervention Strategies on "Cartel Affiliated" Gangs
title_full_unstemmed Criminal Partnerships: The Effects of Intervention Strategies on "Cartel Affiliated" Gangs
title_sort criminal partnerships: the effects of intervention strategies on "cartel affiliated" gangs
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34807
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