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The Silent Militarization: Explaining the Logic of Military Members' Appointment As Police Chiefs

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What explains the militarization of public safety? Despite its failures, police militarization remains a popular policy. Existing scholarship has mainly focused on the police adopting military weapons and tactics but has neglected a silent but consequential type: the appointment of military members as police chiefs. Whereas the conventional wisdom points to partisanship and violence as key drivers, I argue that the militarization of police leaders responds to political motives. Based on a novel data set on 5,580 appointments in Mexico and repeated event history analysis, I find evidence of a top-down militarization sequence. Mayors are more likely to appoint military chiefs when upper levels of government and peers embrace a militarized security strategy. I further illustrate how coercive pressures and strategic incentives drive this sequence

Keywords: COERCIVE PRESSURES; FEDERALISM; MAYORS; MEXICO; POLICE CHIEFS; POLICE MILITARIZATION; POLICING; STRATEGIC INCENTIVES

Document Type: Miscellaneous

Publication date: July 1, 2023

This article was made available online on January 11, 2023 as a Fast Track article with title: "The Silent Militarization: Explaining the Logic of Military Members’ Appointment as Police Chiefs".

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  • Comparative Politics is an international journal that publishes scholarly articles devoted to the comparative analysis of political institutions and behavior. It was founded in 1968 to further the development of comparative political theory and the application of comparative theoretical analysis to the empirical investigation of political issues. Comparative Politics communicates new ideas and research findings to social scientists, scholars, and students, and is valued by experts in research organizations, foundations, and consulates throughout the world.
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