Effectiveness and Internal Security. A Comparative Analysis of El Salvador and Nicaragua

Nicaragua and El Salvador share many commonalities, including geographical vulnerabilities, widespread poverty, the experience of civil conflict in the 1980s, and a transition to democracy in the early 1990s. Nevertheless, each state has drastically divergent levels of violence, as measured parti...

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Main Author: Geoffrey Ellis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Regional Department of Defense Resources Management Studies 2016-06-01
Series:Journal of Defense Resources Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.dresmara.ro/issues/volume7_issue1/03_ellis.pdf
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spelling doaj-d8ec399f15a0479d936b017e53eba8e92020-11-25T02:38:56ZengRegional Department of Defense Resources Management StudiesJournal of Defense Resources Management2068-94032068-94032016-06-0171(12)2736Effectiveness and Internal Security. A Comparative Analysis of El Salvador and NicaraguaGeoffrey Ellis0Naval Postgraduate School, USANicaragua and El Salvador share many commonalities, including geographical vulnerabilities, widespread poverty, the experience of civil conflict in the 1980s, and a transition to democracy in the early 1990s. Nevertheless, each state has drastically divergent levels of violence, as measured particularly by homicide rates, with Nicaragua among the lowest in Latin America and El Salvador among the highest in the world. This paper assesses the historical and institutional variables that account for this divergence and evaluates each state’s security structures using a civil-military relations analysis. In particular, the author uses Bruneau and Matei’s criterion of effectiveness. The findings demonstrate that Nicaragua’s security forces consolidated during the 1980s in a manner more capable of sustaining the democratic transition and confronting new security threats like gangs and organized crime.http://journal.dresmara.ro/issues/volume7_issue1/03_ellis.pdfcivil-military relationsNicaraguaEl SalvadoreffectivenessviolenceCentral America
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Geoffrey Ellis
spellingShingle Geoffrey Ellis
Effectiveness and Internal Security. A Comparative Analysis of El Salvador and Nicaragua
Journal of Defense Resources Management
civil-military relations
Nicaragua
El Salvador
effectiveness
violence
Central America
author_facet Geoffrey Ellis
author_sort Geoffrey Ellis
title Effectiveness and Internal Security. A Comparative Analysis of El Salvador and Nicaragua
title_short Effectiveness and Internal Security. A Comparative Analysis of El Salvador and Nicaragua
title_full Effectiveness and Internal Security. A Comparative Analysis of El Salvador and Nicaragua
title_fullStr Effectiveness and Internal Security. A Comparative Analysis of El Salvador and Nicaragua
title_full_unstemmed Effectiveness and Internal Security. A Comparative Analysis of El Salvador and Nicaragua
title_sort effectiveness and internal security. a comparative analysis of el salvador and nicaragua
publisher Regional Department of Defense Resources Management Studies
series Journal of Defense Resources Management
issn 2068-9403
2068-9403
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Nicaragua and El Salvador share many commonalities, including geographical vulnerabilities, widespread poverty, the experience of civil conflict in the 1980s, and a transition to democracy in the early 1990s. Nevertheless, each state has drastically divergent levels of violence, as measured particularly by homicide rates, with Nicaragua among the lowest in Latin America and El Salvador among the highest in the world. This paper assesses the historical and institutional variables that account for this divergence and evaluates each state’s security structures using a civil-military relations analysis. In particular, the author uses Bruneau and Matei’s criterion of effectiveness. The findings demonstrate that Nicaragua’s security forces consolidated during the 1980s in a manner more capable of sustaining the democratic transition and confronting new security threats like gangs and organized crime.
topic civil-military relations
Nicaragua
El Salvador
effectiveness
violence
Central America
url http://journal.dresmara.ro/issues/volume7_issue1/03_ellis.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT geoffreyellis effectivenessandinternalsecurityacomparativeanalysisofelsalvadorandnicaragua
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