Drugs, Security and Democracy Fellowship > Competitions
2012 Drugs, Security and Democracy Fellowship
Recipients
- Ana M. Arjona
- Columbia University, Postdoctoral Researcher, Earth Institute & Institute for Social and Economic Research
Narco-rulers and Civilian Choice
- Teofilo Ballve
- University of California, Berkeley, PhD Candidate, Geography
Territories of Life and Death: Space, Power, and Violence on a Colombian Frontier
- Nicholas Barnes
- University of Wisconsin, Madison, PhD Candidate, Political Science
Monopolies of Violence: Gang Governance in Rio de Janeiro
- Lilian Josefina Bobea
- Utrecht University, PhD, Sociology
Gaining Ground: What can we Learn from the Resilience of Drug-Plagued Communities?
- Fellipe Abreu de Alcântara
- Editora Abril, Journalist
The impacts of the drug trafficking on the indigenous communities on the border between Brazil and Peru
- Gustavo R Duncan
- Northwestern University, PhD Candidate, Political Science
Oligopolies of Coercion: Explaining the Political Power of Drug Trafficking
- Froylan Vladimir Enciso Higuera
- State University of New York at Stony Brook, PhD Candidate, History
A History on Drugs from Sinaloa to the World, 1909-1985
- Daniel E Esser
- American University, Assistant Professor, International Development
Collective Action Against Urban Violence: Why Some Communities in Ciudad Juárez Succeed and Others Don’t
- Alex Fattal
- Harvard University, PhD Candidate, Anthropology
Guerilla Marketing: Information War and the Demobilization of FARC Rebels
- Alberto Föhrig
- Universidad de San Andrés, Professor, Social Sciences
Policemen, Political Actors and Criminals in Argentina: causes and consequences of a risky triangle
- Araceli A Galante
- Intercambios, Asociacion Civil, Researcher
Reform of Drug Policies in South America: Regional Integration and Social Actors Mobilization
- Annette Iris Idler
- Oxford University, PhD Candidate, Oxford University
Violent Non-state Actors' Arrangements of Convenience in Colombia's Borderlands - an Invisible Threat to Citizen Security?
- Denis R Martinez
- University of Texas at Austin, PhD Candidate, Anthropology
Youth in Marginalized Urban Communities of Central America: Dangerous or In Danger?
- Palloma V Menezes
- Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, PhD Candidate, Sociology
Pacified Favelas: A Study on Mobility, Sociability and Routines
- Gilda M Núñez
- Universidad de Barcelona, PhD Candidate, Sociología, Juridico Penal y Criminología
La participación de las mujeres de barrios populares de Caracas en el negocio de venta y distribución de drogas: un estudio etnográfico
- Jose Carlos Orihuela
- Columbia University, PhD, Sustainable Development
Illegal Trade and Governance Formation in the Peru-Brazil Border
- Fernanda R PagePoma
- State University of New York at Stony Brook, PhD Candidate, Sociology
Piqueteros Behind Bars: Explaining the Policing of Protests by Marginal Groups in Contemporary Argentina
- Federico Perez
- Harvard University, PhD Candidate, Anthropology
Reordering Space: Assemblages of Urban Security and Justice in Contemporary Bogotá
- Brígida Renoldi
- Universidad Nacional de Misiones, Researcher, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Técnicas
Social organization of crime from the police viewpoint: Ethnographies of drug trafficking control in the Tripartite Border Zone between Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay
- Reynaldo T Rojo Mendoza
- University of Pittsburgh, PhD Candidate, Political Science
Collateral Citizens: Mass Responses to Drug Violence and Insecurity in Mexico
- Ellen Jane Sharp
- University of California, Los Angeles, PhD Candidate, Anthropology
Uncivil Society: Lynching and Anti-lynching Efforts in Guatemala
- Diana Alejandra Silva
- Colegio de Mexico, PhD, Political Sociology
“Nos rebelamos a la muerte” Acciones colectivas de los-as jóvenes contra la violencia en Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua” (2006-2012)
- Winifred Tate
- Colby College, Assistant Professor, Anthropology
Paramilitaries, Citizenship and Political Participation in Colombia
- Catalina Uribe Burcher
- International IDEA, Assistant Programme Officer, Democracy, Conflict and Security
The Good, the Bad, and the Dealer: How illicit networks are transforming democratic processes at the municipal level in the Andean Region
- Inge Helena Valencia
- ICESI University, Professor, Social Studies
Among the business and vueltas: drug trafficking and sociabilities ain frontier regions in Colombia
- Ana Teresa Villarreal Montemayor
- University of California, Berkeley, PhD Candidate, Sociology
Violence, Fear of Crime and the Transformation of Everyday Life in Monterrey, Mexico


Get our monthly Council Update