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Journal Article

Citation

Villa RD, Pimenta MCS. J. Hum. Secur. 2019; 15(1): e15010006.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Librello Publishing)

DOI

10.12924/johs2019.15010006

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This article explores the causes underlying a strong presence of violent non-state actors (VNSAs) in South America. Based on a case study of the border area between Colombia and Venezuela, the research relies on a broad empirical data collected from newspapers, official documents and interviews. The analytical perspective has been grounded on a theoretical framework of four dimensions: (i) funding and illegal activities, (ii) presence in strategic regions, (iii) low state presence and (iv) violence, which identifies different forms of presence of VNSAs. When questioned about how VNSAs create new forms of alternative governance in a territorial space of fragile statehood, the results tend to reveal a context in which state governance seems to overlap the alternative and illegal governance of VNSAs, creating a fragile and hybrid governance in the region.

Keywords: Colombian and Venezuelan borders; governance; violence; violent non-state actors


Language: en

Keywords

Colombian and Venezuelan borders; governance; violence; violent non-state actors

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