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Critical Sociology
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DOI: 10.1177/0896920515570500
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Abstract
The goal of this reflection is to develop an explanation about how social actors who express
their discontent in street protests have come to be considered enemies of the rule of law and
social stability, thereby justifying the repressive measures that state authorities take against them.
This dynamic traces its legitimacy to the existence of a social representation of crime that elicits
thoughts of danger and fear for a variety of social groups. In the context of this reflection, we will
analyze the social protest of 1 December 2012 that took place in Mexico City on the occasion of
the presidential inauguration of Enrique Pea Nieto.
Keywords
criminality, enemy, fear, social protest, social representation
Introduction
The goal of this article is to explore the link between the social representation of criminality, shared
by government authorities and some groups in Mexican society, and the punitive actions taken
against individuals who participate in social protests that involve or lead to physical altercations
with the police as well as to damage of public and/or private property. When physical violence is
involved, the particular demands that prompted the social protest become diluted in the social
imaginary because public attention shifts, refocusing on the consequences of material destruction
and the details of physical confrontations (such as the number of people wounded, arrested, etc.).
The social representation of criminality in Mexico has broadened to encompass individuals who
make a living within the informal sector of the economy as well as those who deal in a variety of
illegal markets. The result is widespread social apprehension and fear of these people, considered
dangerous elements since illegality, or activities that fall outside the rule of law, are equated in the
social imaginary with the origin and spread of criminal groups never mind that such groups exist
in complicity with law enforcement agencies (Alvarado, 2012: 384).
Corresponding author:
Miguel ngel Vite Prez, Center for Economic Research, Administrative and Social, Lucio Tapia Mz. 95. Lte. 14. Zona
Escolar. Gustavo A. Madero, DF. CP: 07230, Mxico.
Email: miguelviteperez@yahoo.com.mx
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In fact, economic illegality, which encompasses all activities within the informal sector of the
economy, has been a means of survival for a great number of social groups that are excluded from
the formal economy. It has also given rise to a complex universe of intermediaries who have strong
connections with the authorities, a working relationship so to speak, that has led to a distinct
approach to regulating social practices (Alvarado, 2012: 512513). The informal agreements or
arrangements between the Mexican government and the intermediaries result in economic benefits
and also aid in ensuring social stability. The dynamic of subordination between what is legal and
what is illegal, legitimate vs. illegitimate, however, is a conflictive one, so when the subordinate
part becomes independent it may do away with the agreement. As Mexico has moved from singleparty authoritarianism to a democracy based on a plurality of political parties (Auyero, 2001:
165196) over the past three decades, the tension between the two realms has become more publicly visible. While neither illegality nor the public or semi-covert agreements to regulate it have
disappeared, the legitimization of the use of force by the government, however, is a new element
that has come into play against those who do not accept the governments regulations. Even though
presidential authoritarianism has decreased in Mexico, it is still a significant element in the exercise of state power irrespective of political party, which was readily apparent during the past two
six-year presidential terms when the National Action Party (PAN) was in power and is currently
evident with the return of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) to the presidency with
Enrique Pea Nieto. Among other things, the conflictive relationship between the legal and illegal
realms in the country is now shaping into a battle of might. Those who operate outside the realm
of state law see no benefit in agreeing to abide by such regulations and thus opt to organize their
own interests without state intervention. The reasoning is that there are greater advantages to operating in a fully illegal realm than to do so in one subordinate to government institutions (Zrate,
2012: 120131).
The enemies of social order derive from a process of loss of social attributes that unmoors them
from institutions. This process is rooted in the crisis of the world of work and the states diminished
ability to integrate individuals into society as a guarantor of citizen rights through the power of its
institutions. The construction of a social representation of the enemies of social order, however,
enables the state to define social actors within that unmoored realm, endowing them with particular
identifiable features such as being poor, migrants, unemployed, terrorists, or involved in illegal
businesses like drug trafficking. While the characterization may be ambiguous, it serves to legitimize the states use of force or violence. As a result, the use of force can be seen a means that
enables the state to refashion its control mechanisms over social groups that, at a local and regional
level, have organized their daily life within the realm of illegality imposed by parallel and illicit
orders such as the drug trade.
The social protest that took place in Mexico City on 1 December 2012, on the occasion of
Enrique Pea Nietos presidential inauguration ceremony, has been tied in the social imaginary
with the illegal realm. On a symbolic plane, this has resulted in an association with fear of financial
loss for private businesses because of the inability of local authorities, perceived as structural
weakness, to prevent looting and the destruction of public property during the demonstration. The
social representation of the Other as enemy has reinforced the belief that the role of the authorities
is to keep social protests from degenerating into violence, which is achieved through the presence
of the police force and the demarcation of the space through which the protest can move (specific
streets and avenues), and/or can occupy (what parts of public squares) in the event that the protesters decide to camp out for an extended period of time.
The text is divided into four sections. Focusing on the events of 1 December 2012, in each section a theoretical reflection informs the discussion about how current social representations of
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criminality in Mexico have affected the perception of social protests. The article concludes with a
series of reflections aimed at opening further lines of inquiry into the topic.
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equipped with surveillance technology as a means to keep strangers at bay since they are considered potential enemies ready to strike at any time (Pires, 2007: 257309).
The social representation of the fear of crime is a construct that may find a point of reference in
the social uncertainty and inequality that neoliberal economic policies and the recent financial
crises generated. It finds its real and true meaning, however, when it aids in the definition of criminalized enemies considered responsible for the alleged growth of public insecurity (Escalante,
2012: 21). Violence perpetrated against enemies that are portrayed as criminals is justified through
an ideology of public safety. It does not, however, help to explain the changes that have occurred
in the institutions in charge of crime control, which tend to reproduce a social order based on fear
and the exercise of authority legitimized through its punitive policies (Garland, 2007).
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words, society defined as the institutions that integrate individuals into the whole has become a
mere desire or ideal in the face of the myth of the individual who chooses freely among different
ways of life within a social realm governed by the notion of cohesion. The difference between
integration and cohesion is that the former is defined as a cultural and social order located above
the practices of actors, [while] cohesion designates an inverse mechanism of production of society:
that of the agreements and coordinations that result from social practices (Dubet, 2013: 148).
One of the consequences of the separation between structure and action or subjectivity is that it
is entirely up to the individual to devise and construct his actions and personality. Society thus
becomes a referent in the process of construction of particular singularities. Agreements and deliberations compel individuals to define the ways in which they articulate their desires and interests
as part of a larger group, albeit while protecting their privacy and autonomy (Dubet, 2013: 150).
The concept of an individualized society refers to a group of individuals linked by reciprocal
actions through ephemeral forms or modes of action where what is being represented is a product
of their interactions based on their self-images and of life in common; all of these work together to
maintain group cohesion (Gergen and Gergen, 2011: 1213). The individual constructed via social
cohesion, according to Dubet (2010: 228), has been defined as human capital, interpreted through
the lens of equal opportunity; but also in reference to the individuals characteristics such as selfishness and narcissism, which are two categories derived from the market and ideologized by the
neoliberal economic regime.
Social representations involve meanings that must be considered as ideologies. These have a
firm grounding in reality, and due to their cognitive content, aid in the practical organization of
individuals. That is, they are relations lived with reality that are susceptible to distortions and mystifications (Eagleton, 2005: 4955). Ideology, as Guerrero observes, is not a utopia or an ideal
reality, but rather a reflection of the material conditions within which social interactions occur that
conceals the interests of a particular social group in the systematization of apparently disinterested
thought (2009: 1521). Ideology is thus viewed as a reflection of empirical representations and not
the lived relations with reality.
From a different perspective, Laval and Dardot assert that neoliberalism is not so much an ideology but a rationale (2013: 1517) that guides the actions of those who govern and are governed,
and it utilizes competency as a behavioral norm and a business model to organize human subjectivity. Government thus manages peoples behavior through techniques and procedures with the goal
of creating social cohesion.5 That is, it seeks to integrate individuals into society through their
discrete interests based on an ideology that places the onus of success or failure entirely and exclusively on the individual.
The scope of responsibility of state institutions in the neoliberal context has shrunk because it is
the individual who now maps out or determines his own path, and it may lead to success if it is
drawn in agreement with other individuals. This has given place to fractured images or representations that have led individuals to conceptualize society as a fragmented entity rather than as a unit
(Dubet, 2013). As a result, when we refer to a neoliberal reason we are actually speaking of a set
of tools that are social regulations without immediate social intentions. What has happened in
developing countries is that the coexistence of a legal order and of one outside the parameters of
the law has given place to negotiations or unstable arrangements between the state and private
actors in the interest of governability. Through a process of delegation and control, the authorities
thus exert their power in an indirect manner (Hibou, 2013: 37). This fosters uncertainty because
there is an
imprecision between what is suppressed and what is allowed, between what is authorized, tolerated, and
what is condemned, between the legal and the illegal, and the dynamic surrounding the conflicts among
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the rules, [which] allow not only for the intrusion of politics and an arbitrary approach at any given time,
but also for a permanent state of negotiations among the actors. (Hibou, 2013: 39)
Imprecision and instability have become, under certain conditions or circumstances, a necessity
that requires agreements to be established with a differentiated universe of private intermediaries
given that state institutions cannot offer guarantees because they are not strong enough to perform
some of their control functions or exercise their political power. This weakness, furthermore, lays
bare a real inability to respond to social demands in a formal and institutional manner. This is why
loyalty trumps legality.
Institutional uncertainty, which became evident, for instance, in the United States, when
social policies were dismantled in the wake of the economic crises of the 1970s and 1980s,
resulted in the criminalization of poverty and misery through the exercise of institutional violence; that is, the use of law enforcement officers to punish the illegal markets of the poor that
were associated with the sale of drugs (Wacquant, 2000). At the same time, a social representation that linked fear of the Other to the condition of poverty and misery began to take shape
(Wacquant, 2005). The punitive focus of dealing with criminalized enemies went hand-in-hand
with the proliferation of surveillance technology, which strengthened the control logic of a state
that maintained that the enemys identity should be defined not only by his or her personal information but also by his or her biometric characteristics. The enemys social behaviors had to be
supervised in light of his unpredictability he could strike at any time with illegal or violent
actions (About and Denis, 2010).
The growing use of institutional violence and the role that surveillance technology plays in supporting it is directly linked to the transformation of a state that used to base its legitimacy on a
welfare system, to one that now builds legitimacy through the privatization of various state functions. Furthermore, and this brings me to my hypothesis, uncertainty has been turned into fear, and
fear into the perception of imminent danger to existence or way of life. This, in turn, has reinforced
the notion that in order to guarantee safety, the state must strengthen its surveillance and punishment capabilities (Lyon, 2003). The end of the Cold War brought to light new enemies such as drug
traffickers and terrorist groups, which the US government, for example, has criminalized in the
name of national security. The punitive approach to dealing with these enemies justifies the use of
violence since criminals are stripped of their rights and social attributes (Garland, 2011).
Interestingly, this approach has grown to encompass migrants, the poor, and the unemployed, especially when they are not citizens of the country in which they live.
The surveillance or securitarian state has established a relationship with those it governs that is
based on a complicity fed by the demand for security stemming from representations of fear of the
Other that is to say the enemies, who constitute a threat to life and personal property (Foessel,
2011: 43). According to Agamben (2006), the act of criminalizing the Other, especially when the
government defines him as a criminal, has resulted in the social devaluation of the subject because
he has no rights and hence is not regarded as a citizen. Living on the margins of society, the criminalized subject is considered to be someone who does not belong since he inhabits an unmoored
space where all sorts of illegal activities that are not regulated by any police force take place
(Logiudice, 2007: 4751). An individual devoid of any legal status, as Iglesias remarks (2013:
5455), cannot be judged or condemned though he can be eliminated, his life terminated through
violent means, since he occupies an exceptional space where the state can exercise its power to
dispose of life without legal limitations. Hence, the collective fear of being in exceptional or uncertain situations grows because illegality generates social practices that the state may criminalize: as
the state takes punitive measures to apply the rule of law, it may bring about collateral damage or
consequences (Bauman, 2011).
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In short, collective fear emerged as social inequality expanded, a process that several economic
and financial crises accelerated. State institutions have been unable to step in to provide or guarantee social safety nets, but have endeavored to maintain their punitive functions aimed at combatting
the uncertainty allegedly created by the illegal or outlaw order.
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armed forces such is the case in Michoacn, for example (Maldonado, 2013: 101112). Beginning
in 2007, the Mexican government has used both the army and the navy to fight drug trafficking, a
decision made by then-president Felipe Caldern. This move legitimized the use of violence and
led some of the illegal orders to respond in kind as they deployed their own armed groups to combat the federal governments forces, a clear indication that there is widespread access to the means
that enable the practice of violence (Arteaga, 2013: 162). The use of legitimized state violence has
fostered the emergence of legislative inflation; protest actions are thus penalized as soon as negotiations about demands fall through and events lead to violence against material property or the
police (Foessel, 2011: 24). This is what happened in the social protest of 1 December 2012, in
Mexico City, during Enrique Pea Nietos presidential inauguration ceremony.
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crowd. A group of students then proceeded to follow Pea Nieto through the universitys hallways,
preventing the presidential candidate from fulfilling his agenda for the visit. At one point, he had
to seek refuge in a bathroom from where he called for help to leave the premises. The following
day, 40 newspapers ran the story about the visit, remarking on its success despite an attempted
boycott organized by infiltrators (Nez, 2012: 256). In response, 131 students of the IberoAmerican University uploaded a video to YouTube in which they stated they were not infiltrators
but legitimate students of the university, each identifying him or herself by name and showing his
or her official and current student identification card. The video elicited dozens of expressions of
support via the internet with hashtags such as #YoSoy132 (I am 132), shaping a virtual social
protest against the presidential candidate. This was possible because of almost instant mass communication via the internet that enables, as Castells observes, autonomous communication beyond
the boundaries of institutional power (2012: 2627). However, in order for the social protests that
propagate via virtual networks to make the leap to real space, to become a social movement on the
streets, there must be an interconnection between digital space and public space. In other words,
the digital protest must be visible in a place where social life takes place, such as the streets and
town squares, especially because some of these places have symbolic power associated with state
or financial institutions (Castells, 2012: 28).
The social representation of social protests in Mexico has acquired a negative tonality in recent
years as demonstrations are increasingly considered serious disruptions of social order. The economic and political lites have therefore gradually devised mechanisms to control them, which
involve the use of the police and/or armed forces along with a growing reliance on surveillance
technology. Individuals who participate in public protests may be criminalized, especially if there
is violence involved affecting material property. When protesters target buildings or infrastructure
that may symbolically represent the sphere of authority, violence acquires a diffuse character
because the structures come to embody the power of that person, group of people or entity (Sofsky,
2006: 192193). Thus, as Marramao remarks, power is no longer concentrated in a particular subject (2013: 1415) because it has been spread out or disseminated over various social subjects
(Foucault, 1980). It is important to bear in mind that for many decades social protests in Mexico
were controlled by subordinating their leaders to the political logic of an authoritarian social state,
as well as through repressive measures aimed at destroying the organizational capabilities of different organizations (Zermeo, 1996). Social protests nowadays are associated with the idea of a
regressive modernity, or the dismantling of modernity; that is, as a negative element that manifests
social fragmentation and marginalization, both of which are linked to the growth of poverty and
illegal economic activities. These are dynamics that go against the drive toward solidarity that
helps to strengthen citizenship (Zermeo, 2005: 1929).
Marcelo Ebrard Casaubon, the head of government of Mexico City from 20002006, established a system of delinquency control that relied on the development of personnel capabilities as
well as the use of cutting-edge technology. As he remarked:
There was a significant qualitative change: new recruits have attended high school, the number of women
reached 32% among the new generations of recruits, and we have advanced on-the-ground experience in
terms of how police officers approach the observation and evaluation of citizens. Another qualitative
change is that the city has at its disposal a system of 15,000 video cameras that allow us to monitor and
supervise police activity as well as that of all public entities. This has been a formidable instrument that
has strengthened the police forces investigative capabilities. (2013: 5)
Clearly, there was a coincidence between the federal governments social representation of crime
control and that of Mexico Citys since both revolved around the use of technology and the professionalization of the police force. They also coincided in terms of methodology later on as both used
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the police force to punish the violent protesters who demonstrated on the day Pea Nieto was
sworn in as President of Mexico.
On 1 December 2012, a group of students that supported #YoSoy132 occupied the square of
the Monument to the Revolution in Mexico City, a location that students had occupied earlier in the
year, in June, to publicly demonstrate their dismay at the medias partial support of then presidential candidate Pea Nieto. On the day of the presidential inauguration a number of students showed
up wearing masks and dressed in black in order to protest the swearing in ceremony at the National
Congress, a building that had been fenced off for the occasion and was heavily guarded by the
Federal Police. The demonstration eventually degenerated into violence involving physical altercations with city and federal police as well as material damage to public and private property in a
commercial and touristic sector of historic downtown Mexico City.8 In an effort to quell the violence, the police responded with heavy use of force and made arbitrary arrests. Police actions were
later justified through negative portrayals of those involved in the disturbances, identifying them
as anarchists (Jimnez, 2012: 8). Conversely, there were also allegations that the perpetrators were
actually infiltrators, people not directly involved with the protest, planted by the government with
the goal of instigating violence so that the authorities could justify the use of force to terminate the
demonstration. This is a well-worn representation that some leftist intellectuals continue to hold
onto because they always deem protesters demands to be legitimate. It also coincides with the oldtime view of the corporate state paradigm in which government wielded its power to destroy the
populations organizational capabilities (Gilly, 2012: 14).
In any case, this incident offers a glimpse of how the Mexican judicial system works: based on
accusations that lack evidence and on the fabrication of perpetrators since police agents declarations were sufficient evidence to justify the incarceration of alleged guilty parties. Human Rights
Commission of the Federal District (CDHDF) documented 32 cases of arbitrary arrests in this
incident, including those of passersby not involved in the protest who were charged with disturbing
the peace because they expressed their objection to the polices use of force (Len and Rodrguez,
2012: 5; Lpez, 2012: 13). The individuals detained were subject to Article 362 of the Federal
District Penal Code, which carries a sentence of between 5 and 30 years in prison as well as the
suspension of political rights for a period of 10 years for disturbing the peace (Legislacin Penal
D.F., 2013: 141). However, due to the arbitrariness of the arrests and to the fact that among the
detained there were militants of left-wing organizations linked to the political party that has been
in power in the citys government since the 1990s (the Party of the Democratic Revolution or
PRD), the Commission of Law Enforcement and Administration of the Legislative Assembly, consisting of nine deputies six of which represent the PRD modified Article 362 of the Federal
District Penal Code to reduce the sentence for disturbing the peace to two to seven years in prison.
The modification was to be applied retroactively so that those processed would have the right to be
released on bail (Herrera, 2012: 1).
The local deputies actions clearly demonstrated the ties between the legal and illegal orders, a
relationship that in this case opened the door to custom arrangements when it came to sanctioning
those allegedly responsible for disturbing the peace. At the same time, though, the negative social
image of the protesters as enemies of social order was reinforced through a semantic operation:
they were portrayed as delinquent and violent individuals whose manipulating agents or intellectual leaders were radical leftist organizations (anarchists) and in some cases even drug cartels
(Reguillo, 2013: 355356). The negative social representation that equated student protesters with
anarchism was not the only construct that contributed to the violence that day. Another important
aspect of that image is the widespread social feeling of fear or panic regarding the precariousness
of public safety, which is also linked to a fear for life and property (Escalante, 2012: 15). There is
also the idea that the most serious and impactful criminal activity is borne from individuals who
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come together in organized groups, which can bring about behaviors that may lead to terrorist
activities, the production and trade of drugs, human trafficking, undocumented migrant trafficking,
etc. (Escalante, 2012: 73). The image of deleterious group activity, derived from the Federal Law
against Organized Crime, served as the basis for the publication on 23 March 2013 in the Official
Gazette of the Federal District (Gaceta Oficial del Distrito Federal) of Agreement 16/2013 that
backed a protocol for police conduct of the Secretariat of Public Safety of the Federal District for
crown control, which authorizes the police to use firearms, irritating chemical substances, and
violent means to break up the crowd when the level of aggression among the protesters has reached
a point to justify such an approach (Rodrguez, 2013: 45). As a result of the escalation of events on
1 December 2012, anti-riot police now always accompany groups of students or young people who
demonstrate in the historic downtown area of Mexico City in order to prevent violent disturbances.
Additionally, storefronts and the facades of public buildings are protected with metal screens, and
in some cases streets and avenues are closed off with makeshift metal fences to keep protesters
from passing through them.9
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them, [and] they had [also] planned to protest against Pea Nieto. When these groups met up they were
emotionally moved, they began to share blankets [] Two different factions took shape: those who united
and started shouting, and the others, the ones who supported Pea Nieto. (Garca, 2012: 137)
After Pea Nieto was elected President of Mexico, a #YoSoy 132 supporter, Pablo Reyna, a
student at the Ibero-American University, remarked that
[it was] an emotional hit [it was] disconcerting [] there was a group of people that was really enthused
with the energy of the 132, that [] took to the street so that [ Enrique Pea Nieto] would not attain
[the presidency of the country] and that did not happen. (Villegas, 2012: 14)
What did happen was that thereafter #YoSoy 132 disbanded into smaller cells that have since
then supported a number of social protests with various goals. According to Ivn Benumeo, a law
student at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (Universidad Nacional Autnoma de
Mxico), this signaled the end of collective indignation and discontent in a country where []
individualism prevails [] The key [ is] to spend less time on Facebook and more time in
marches and public gatherings (Villegas, 2012: 15).
The original cluster of 131 students became #YoSoy 132 when students from other institutions
of higher education joined them; they hailed from the National Polytechnic Institute (Instituto
Politcnico Nacional), the Metropolitan Autonomous University (Universidad Autnoma
Metropolitana), and the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Organizers readily use electronic social networks, among others, to organize social protests, as was the case in the 1 December
2012 demonstration against Pea Nietos inauguration as president of the country.
The details of the various events that led to the demonstration that day offer insight into how the
different forces at play may have led to the violence that characterized this particular social protest.
Faced with popular outcry about the results of the presidential election, the Electoral Tribunal, the
only institution with the power to annul them, upheld Pea Nieto as the legitimate winner of the
process. A number of social organizations in the country rejected this institutional response, claiming it was unjust. Feeling thus disenfranchized, these organizations opted to express their discontent through confrontation and violence. Interestingly, the vandalism and destruction that ensued
legitimized the decision of the Mexico City government to deploy, beforehand, the police in full
force. This strategy has become the authorities routine response, which has managed to progressively weaken the robust fabric of social organizations that for decades had protested in the country
(Zermeo, 1996: 4244). A segment of the #YoSoy 132 movement supported the 1 December 2012
street protests in Mexico City. Activists groups with leftist and anarchist leanings were also
involved in the organization of those protests (Nieto, 2013: 8). This information was obtained not
only from postings that a number of the demonstration participants made on Facebook and
YouTube, detailing some of their actions that day, but also, and more importantly, from police
records that identify them as activists involved in social organizations focused on fighting the system (Cuevas, 2013: 67). For example, the lawyer defending Osvaldo Rigel Barreta, the only
participant of the December 1st protests who was processed and then sentenced to a year in prison,
remarked that his client was sentenced because of his political ideas and his appearance or dress.
The sentencing judge, moreover, based his decision solely on the testimony of the policemen
involved in Barretas arrest (Rodrguez, 2014: 32).
Because the arrests of some of the participants in the 1 December 2012 protest were arbitrary,
their relatives staged further demonstrations that were supported by a cell of #YoSoy 132. Fifteen
months later, on 5 May 2014, 14 of those who were arrested were freed the only one who
remained incarcerated was Barreta, as mentioned above. A number of those freed commented on
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their experience while incarcerated, making it clear, according to Sierra (2014: 11), that the
Mexican penal justice system is inclined to penalize collective actions of protest. For instance,
Alejandro Lugo, one of the 14 who were freed, stated that
from the moment of my arrest, I was threatened with rape [] first the [ riot police], then the police
officers in charge of the investigation [] In truth, it was a problem that affected 15 months of my life []
there were blows, cruel, inhuman treatment, the guards would take pictures with us derisively, they stripped
us and humiliated us.
In the case of Carlos Chvez, who was arrested for his rebuke of a riot officer, his confrontation
with the police was captured on video that was later distributed to some television news outlets.
Chvez remarked that the arrest not only affected him personally but also had a lasting impact on
his familys health, pointing out that: I was really distressed that my mother had diabetes [and] my
grandmother was in a dire state of health [].
The CDHDF called for the city to provide compensation to those unjustly arrested on 1
December 2012. Former detainee Claudia Trejo, however, pointed out that it is even schizophrenic to speak about a plan to compensate for damages when [Hctor] Serrano (the Secretary of
Government of Mexico City) only speaks of financial compensation [] Financial compensation
is just one aspect of reparation.
Conclusions
Social representations are constructs that endow reality and certain social behaviors with particular
meaning. Violence as a social representation derives from the need to ensure public safety in the
face of the illegal realm, which has been portrayed in broad strokes as the criminal sector of society, comprising groups or individuals who have been defined a priori as a threat to social order. In
its quest to ensure social safety, the state has legitimized its use of violence via the police and or
armed forces as it endeavors to combat the enemies of public order and peace. These enemies are
actors whose actions and business dealings are not subordinate to the legal realm as defined by
state politics and policies, therefore their field of action is outside state control (Astorga, 2012: 54).
In the 1990s, the Mexican political elite defined drug traffickers as enemies of public order and
safety, which coincided with the point in time when traffickers enjoyed the greatest autonomy from
state political power. This was because the process of democratic transition in Mexico, from a oneparty monopoly to a multi-party system, reconfigured government power in the country in such a
way that the old police apparatus fell apart since suppressing political dissidence was no longer its
main objective.
The states approach to reestablishing control over illegal markets supported by criminal activity has been twofold: on the one hand, it has invested in the professionalization of the police forces
throughout the country and made use of sophisticated surveillance technology; on the other, it has
deployed the armed forces to specific territories throughout the country in an attempt to reestablish
State control as it combats crime in acutely affected regions. The government has thereby created
the notion that military presence is necessary in order to recover the territories currently occupied and managed by criminals. This logic informs the use of self-defense armed guards that has
proliferated of late in the states of Michoacn and Guerrero.
The creation of enemies identified with crime, however, has led to the criminalization of protesters who engage in acts of aggression or violence against the police and/or private property. The
social representation that links social protests with criminality has found fertile ground in the population at large because it has come to view social mobilizations, such as the one discussed above,
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as a threat to social order. What is lost in such an interpretation is the fact that those protests are
borne from the governments inability to fulfill its primary social functions of meeting its citizens
demands for social wellbeing. Uncertainty has taken hold of society as the state is no longer a
guarantor of social integration, and this is manifested as a vulnerability that does not disappear
even though the dynamic of illegal markets has created producers and consumers on the margins
of the legal order.
I submit, as a hypothesis, that the state is currently to assert and reestablish its control through
the criminalization of activities and individuals involved in the illegal realm, which encompasses
a robust variety of activities within the informal economy, from small-scale everyday goods and
services to large-scale networks of drug and human traffickers, among others. The state, however,
has not sought to devise a practical strategy at the local level on how to deal with the power of the
illegal realm of society, which also is autonomous. This has led to a situation that has fostered the
fabrication of enemies. In some cases, the enemies turn out to be individuals who lack formal identity as defined by state institutions. Since they lack institutional attributes, they do not enjoy the
rights of a citizen as conferred by law that would enable them to find their rightful place amid the
fragmentation of Mexican society.
Funding
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit
sectors.
Notes
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
In Mexico, the governments punitive focus was consolidated in 2007 when Felipe Caldern, then president of the country, decided to call the Army and the Navy to duty on local soil to combat drug traffickers
in of the countrys regions. At every public event Caldern reiterated his monothematic speech about the
war against drug trafficking (Nuez, 2012: 5659).
These social behaviors have been defined as intolerable because they allegedly lead to violence that then
must be combatted with legitimate state violence. This dynamic reactivates the myth of the state as the
guardian of legal order, which is equated with public safety (Ogilvie, 2013: 7677).
In some developed countries the welfare state crisis began in the 1970s, while in other Latin American
countries it did so the following decade, in the 1980s, as was Mexicos case in 1982 with its foreign debt
crisis (Sotelo, 2010: 4450).
In this case, liberty is understood as a practice, that which is carried out or performed, whereas necessity
springs from a desire (Foucault, 2010: 57).
This notion of guiding others conduct is termed governability and it is characterized by the governments use of a variety of methods to shape and manage the behaviors of the governed (Foucault, 2006).
The hegemonic political party was the Revolutionary Institutional Party (abbreviation as PRI in Spanish).
For more than 70 years it monopolized access to elected posts at the federal, state, and municipal levels.
Moreover, it created an authoritarian regime because it allowed power to be concentrated in the presidency of the country.
The National Action Party (Partido Accin Nacional, better known as PAN) won the presidential elections for the first time in the year 2000, and again in 2006 amid claims of electoral fraud brought forth
by the leftist opposition party.
Alameda Central, a public municipal park in downtown Mexico City, was remodeled and reopened
on 26 November 2012. Funding was provided through mixed sources as the city government, private
businesses and the federal government contributed to the project. The Alameda suffered damages in the
protest of 1 December 2012, which angered Marcelo Ebrards office (Mendoza, 2012: 12).
The Anti-Terrorism Law was approved on 3 December 2013. It provides for the suspension of citizen
rights and guarantees in public demonstrations that threat public peace. The Commission of the Federal
15
Vite Prez
District furthermore approved an initiative that outlines new crimes that carry jail sentences for those
who obstruct free access to pedestrian and/or vehicular circulation as they go to and from their workplaces, and also for those who disturb public peace during the course of a public demonstration or
protest. The deputies stated that they did not seek to curtail citizens right to demonstrate, but instead to
regulate such demonstrations. As a result, marches are now banned from the primary arteries in Mexico
City and can only take place between 11 in the morning and 6 in the afternoon (Cervantes, 2013: 1722).
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