List of Figures
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction: Sustained Mobilization Amidst Collusive
Impunity
2. The Beginnings: The Formation and Disruption of Legal
Consciousness
3. State and Civil Society Responses to Disappearances in
Mexico
4. The Evolution of Legal Consciousness: Gaining Voice and
Grappling With the Law
5. Participatory Investigations: The Legal & Political
Opportunities of the Uneven State
6. To What Effect? How Sustained Mobilization Affects Collusive
Impunity
7. Conclusion
References
Index
Janice K. Gallagher is an Assistant Professor of Political Science
at Rutgers University, and during AY 2021-22, she is a Democracy
Visiting Faculty Fellow at Harvard University's Ash Center for
Democratic Governance and Innovation. Gallagher specializes in
comparative politics with a focus on state-society relations and
human rights in Latin America. Her research includes extensive
fieldwork in Mexico and Colombia, and she has previously worked
as
a human rights accompanier in Colombia.
This is a great work in the classic tradition of law and society
studies. It tracks the personal and social transformations that
start with the experience of violent loss in a context of state
incapacity or indifference, and shows how those transformations end
up, partially at least, changing the state, constructing a new
legality. It offers an intimate, and necessary, look at the
struggle against impunity in a country wracked by loss and
violence.
*Daniel M. Brinks, Professor of Government and of Law, The
University of Texas at Austin*
Beautifully written and extremely timely, Bootstrap Justice
explores the tragedy of forced disappearances in Mexico. Gallagher
presents vivid micro histories that bring individuals' personal
dramas to life without losing sight of the broader theoretical or
structural points that these stories are an illustration of and
conduit to. To achieve this, the author had to immerse herself in
the case like no other scholar before her. This long and highly
involved fieldwork paid off: the result is an incredibly rich
account of drug-related and state-sponsored violence in Mexico, one
that yields important lessons for scholars and activists alike.
*Ezequiel González-Ocantos, Associate Professor in the Qualitative
Study of Comparative Political Institutions, University of
Oxford*
Bootstrap Justice does the important work of centering the voices
of people whose lives have been upended by the disappearance of a
loved one. Gallagher's careful analysis of their stories shows how
trauma can reconfigure what is imaginable, transforming
expectations of the state and of ourselves as political subjects in
turn. The book has broad implications for how we think about
mobilization processes, the transformative role of grievances, and
the development of political subjectivities.
*Erica S. Simmons, Associate Professor of Political Science and
International Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison*
How do people obtain justice in contexts of insecurity and
impunity? In this remarkable and deeply researched book, Janice
Gallagher unpacks the dynamic interaction between claim-making,
collective action, and state responses amidst cases of enforced
disappearances in Mexico. An important contribution to existing
research on social movements, crime, and legal studies, Bootstrap
Justice also honors lives—those whose whereabouts remain unknown,
and those who marshal courage, social ties, and politics to fight
for their rights as citizens and human beings.
*Eduardo Moncada, Barnard College, Columbia University*
Bootstrap Justice is deserving of a wide audience. It draws from
across disciplines and fields of study, includinganthropology,
political science, sociology, and social movement studies, which
are put into conversation in a way that generates novel insight
into one of the most pressing themes in the study of contemporary
politics and society of Mexico. I find myself recommending
Bootstrap Justice even to colleagues who are completely unconnected
to Mexican studies, because the book exemplifies the best of a
'community-engaged' practice to which many scholars aspire.
Bootstrap Justice contributes to the advancement of thinking across
disciplines, for a network of scholars who are interested in
dynamics of contentious politics in contexts of pervasive
violence.
*Nicholas Jon Crane, The Journal of Development Studies*
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