The other direction of legal pluralism emanates from the state itself. I refer to the de facto existence of two legal orders that derive from the uneven enactment of state legality to distinct population groups. The growing problematic of human rights violations in formally democratic and constitutional regimes witnesses to this duality. Legality, especially in that which refers to individual rights and guarantees and to the set of principles, norms, and practices subsumed in the concept of "rule of law", do not have effective enforcement, or have it in a sporadic way, for many of the more vulnerable segments of society –e.g. indigenous communities, women and children, poor people, rural workers, villagers—or more conflictive ones: political opposition, critical journalists, union activists… The formally democratic and constitutional states tend to violate their own legality in the actual treatment of these population groups; in facts, and independent of formal legality, discrimination can take place between first class citizens and these others, implicitly and practically second class ones.
Duality in the legal treatment of the population implies an effective violation of the rule of law. Accordingly, democracy and constitutional guarantees tend to be effective from the middle classes upward; in middle and upper-class urban settings; for the white and mestizo populations; for men much more than for women. In these circumstances the legality of the state is experienced as illegitimacy, injustice, authoritarianism, or arbitrariness by the discriminated ones, no matter what the legal format is. Cultural, class or even political biases in media networks headline much more the violence of the poor and the oppressed than that of those who have been more favored in the social distribution of wealth and prestige. The rudimentary quality or scarcity of their resources, their unsophisticated manners, collide with our frames of reference and raise immediately the specter of the return to barbarity just when we were convinced that we are full members of modernity. But the discretion of the gunshot with a silencer, the institutional capacity to erase the fingerprints or to disguise as defense against an aggression the killings of peasants or workers does not change the nature of the violence exercised from political or economic power, and certainly reinforces its impunity.
The authoritarianism of the dominant classes and the state toward the subaltern populations may deliver an effect of perverse pedagogy upon the latter which impacts on their strategies of mobilization and resistance, as well on the organizations that channel popular discontent. The coefficient of violence and brutality in societies fragmented by sharp differentiations of class, ethnicity, gender, and regionalisms, tend to be larger than in more integrated and homogenous societies. Moreover, they tend to be accepted as normal features of daily life by the victims themselves, as they perceive the functionality of violence as a means to conflict resolution, goal attainment, or assessing individual prestige (Vilas 1996). When state agencies do not arrive, or are perceived by the people as arriving late or improperly, and this situation persists over time, the delegation of coercive power in the state does not make sense and direct exercise of violence by the actors reappears.
In these situations violence operates as a mediating dimension of daily social relations. When the state monopoly on violence is nonexistent or imperfect, or is not perceived as legitimate, physical survival and social prestige may rely on the ability of individuals to display a likely threat of violence. State’s tolerance of private violence, the abuses of state agencies of prevention and coercion, the insecurity of the world of poverty, all reinforce the traditional culture of possessing and using arms, and of violent resolution of conflicts. In communities where hunting provides to nutrition, the use of guns is a basic condition for subsistence. The idea that power is exercised through the possession of certain objects –land, money, livestock, arms—is present in all societies and cultures. In some of them these elements are considered not only as resources of power, but as power itself; the poor effectiveness of the processes of socialization activated by the state, the modes of interacting with nature, and above all general insecurity, keep that conception alive (Anderson 1972; Vilas 1989; Pinheiro 1997).
The potential for violence in this type of society increases in periods of profound social and economic transformations, which put to question the established system of hierarchies, expectations, and reciprocities, and submit the existing processes or mechanisms of social cohesion to tension. It is a well known fact the impact of capitalist penetration and of commercial relations in areas previously marginal to them: erosion of community relations, economic and social differentiation, use of money as the standard for exchange, etc. Shifting fortunes may lead to further differentiation and deterioration of solidarity; mistrust spreads out, as well as gossip, envy, and insecurity. The rapid change from relative homogeneity to economic differentiation turns out to be unexplainable according to traditional standards; suspiciousness arise of spurious plans or agreements to destroy or downgrade communal life or values, etc. (cfr Boyer & Nissenbaum 1974; Taussig 1980; Greenberg 1989; Haas 1999; etc.). More recent events, such as processes of neoliberal macroeconomic adjustment, trade and financial deregulation, or the expansion of production and commercialization of drugs, increase insecurity of life and social conflicts: dizzying enrichment of some and impoverishment of others; the surge of new criteria of legitimacy and authority; deterioration of labor markets; migrations; changes in the systems of relative prices and in patterns of land use; development of new criteria of prestige and deference, among others.
During the 1980s and 1990s far-reaching structural reforms were implemented in México, severely disrupting social and economic life at both urban and rural areas. These changes were coupled by processes of intense social and political confrontation addressed to political democratization, which included display of government-sponsored violence against activists and sympathizers of the opposition parties –which also protested against the social impact of market-oriented reforms. The 1994 uprising of the Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (EZLN) in the southern state of Chiapas was followed in 1995 in the state of Guerrero by the Popular Revolutionary Army (EPR). During the period covered by the present investigation (1987 to mid 1998) several hundreds of violent conflicts set the stage for the specific type of issues targeted by this study: armed clashes between communities, conflicts between families, robbery of cattle and other belongings, executions conducted by groups linked to drug trafficking, kidnappings for ransom, religious conflicts, politically motivated violence, massacres of rural residents, ambushes, mistreatment of police or military prisoners, rapes, tortures, disappearances. In all, these facts stress the imperfect character of the state monopoly on the use of physical force in its two dimensions of effectiveness and legitimacy as well the social climate in which the problematic of mass lynchings is located.
The preceding assertion may seem excessive given the institutional strength of the Mexican state vis-à-vis others in Latin America in multiethnic contexts and with similarly extensive and varied geographies, or the spread of the state institutions throughout the entire Mexican geography. However the material presence of the state, in particular of its coercive agencies, when clashing with the expectations and values of specific population groups, may lead to conflictive situations as much as the absence of those institutions when the population feels they are needed.
II. Lynchings in Mexico
a. The universe
Two types of direct exercise of punitive force are differentiated: 1) that which expresses the more or less tense or conflictive coexistence of a plurality of normative orders. With regard to our topic, conflictive observance of normative systems manifests itself in the communitarian dimension of lynching –i.e. lynchings conducted as reactions to violations of communal affairs or norms; 2) the reaction of people in the face of the ineffectiveness of the state legal order to prevent the commission and the punishment of conducts that state order itself classifies as illegal. In the first case community law or costumes are placed above state law; lynching expresses a retention of punitive violence by certain social actors. In the second case, it acts to fill the void created by the ineffectiveness of the state legal order; lynchings involve a re-appropriation of violence by certain social actors.
During the period covered by the investigation (1987-1998) 103 lynchings were conducted according to our definition (see Appendix). Nearly half of the lynchings took place in the states of Oaxaca, Chiapas, and Guerrero (table 1), all of them with high proportions of indigenous population that endow their social fabric with a strong communitarian structure. In fact, the existence of community networks based on living together in the same space for prolonged periods, on ethnic/linguistic or kinship links is a recurrent fact (table 2). While not a few lynchings took place in typically urban environments (Mexico City, Guadalajara, Tapachula, Tijuana, Huejutla…) they were conducted mostly in neighborhoods with strong sociocultural, transgenerational ties (such as Milpa Alta or Tepito in Mexico City). More than half of the urban lynchings (16 out of 28) were executed by residents of areas with these characteristics.
b. Who commit lynching?
The high density of the social setting framing the lynchings is confirmed in table 3. In most of cases those committing the lynching are related to the victim or victims of the actions blamed on the lynched: neighbors, friends, relatives. This type of lynching is characteristic in villages or townships in rural areas.
Women participate in lynchings, though there seems to be a sort of differentiation of interventions according to sex. While men predominate in the execution of the physical punishment (such as beatings), as well in hanging or burning the victim or in the use of firearms, women’s involvement consists above all in denouncing the actual or alleged crime to be punished, the encouragement of men, or in the deliberations on what to do with the eventual victim of the lynching.
In all cases the lynchings appear as a response to actions actually or presumably committed by the lynched that strongly offend the lynchers. In lynchings committed by eye-witnesses the reaction is immediate to the action that triggers them, and in several cases they were conducted by the same people who was hurt by the actions of the offenders. In these situations lynchings imply a mechanic appeal to the principle of "an eye for an eye"", which is not confined however to this specific type of lynching. While most frequent in large urban settings, "reactive" lynchings are not exclusive to them. Yet in any setting they display the highest levels of reactive spontaneity. The ingredients of deliberation and organization that are frequent in the lynchings which take place in rural environments are here nonexistent, or reduced to the minimum expression of the commanding voice of the most angry instigators of the action.
c. The outcome
Half of the lynchings eventually lead to the death of the victim (table 4). The other half corresponds to interrupted lynchings, usually by police or other public authority intervention (table 5). The latter are taken into account because in spite of their "unfinished" character they witness to the will of the crowd to severely punish the victim. Putting the victim to death is, in fact, the ultimate outcome of lynching. Only in two out of 103 lynchings the crowd voluntarily desisted to carry things up to that end.
With the exception of cases when lynching is executed in application of village or community customs, seldom the lynchers acknowledge their intention to kill the victim. It is usually claimed that they only sought to punish or teach a lesson to the victim, and the death is explained as an accidental by-product.
d. Lynching and threats of lynching
It is interesting to note the resorting to threats of lynching as a way of obtaining reparation for the harm caused by the threatened or his/her family. To my knowledge, this is a type of action that does not appear in the studies conducted in other countries (see e.g. Holanda et al. 1995; Souza Martins 1996; Fitzhugh Brundage 1997). There is a broad variety of circumstances in which the threat of lynching is professed, as well with regard to the victim of the threat and the purpose for it. This variety suggests that lynching presents itself as a standard procedure which is appealed to with relative naturalness in that it forms part of a range of available answers for the group when faced with what it considers a violation of its rules. A hypothesis reinforced by the fact that in some communities it was observed a certain recurrence in lynching.
e. The method
The predominant form of lynching is by beating with fists or with sticks, machetes and rocks (table 6). Only in 13% of the cases were firearms employed, despite their relatively easy availability in the rural world: 22 caliber rifles, hunting shotguns, and other arms of lower caliber. Beating and stoning are ingredients present in all the lynchings, although not all lead to the victim’s death. When it does happen as a result of gunshots, the preceding group beating allows distinguishing between a lynching and the illegal executions committed by drug traffickers, guardias blancas, or repressive official bodies.
Lynchings display a brutality similar to that which is denounced in state authorities or in the actual or alleged conduct of the victim. The appeal to the own body for executing the lynching, or the resort to elementary instruments which can be considered the body’s projection in that their effectiveness depends on the personal skill or the physical force of the person who uses them (sticks, machetes, rocks…) contributes to the image of cruelty and brutality characteristic of lynching. They likewise increase the exemplary impact lynchers assign to their action. Several of the cases recorded in this investigation are particularly expressive in that respect. At the same time, the brutality and cruelty present in many lynchings can be considered illustrations of the effect of perverse pedagogy, already mentioned, of the exercise of power by the ruling classes or state agencies.
Resorting to beating also points to the lack of physical distance between the lynchers and their victim, thus reinforcing the sense of justice by one’s own hand that people use to describe lynching, and endowing it with a literal meaning. Beating makes the individual an undifferentiated participant in the crowd and even endows him/her of a certain anonymity, as his/her action reinforces a collective dimension which, in the image of the lynchers, favors the idea that it is "the community", "the people", "the villages" (los pueblos) who does lynch, at the same time that it hides the individual involvement. In contrast to the cold or distant character of a gunshot, and to the comparatively easy identification of who pulled the trigger, the beating, the hanging, the fire, increase the feeling of direct personal involvement in the commission of the act, without anyone being able to be held responsible individually, or feel individually responsible for the final, additive outcome.
This last point helps also to understand the apparent incongruence between the intentional application of a brutal physical punishment, and the subsequent statement that no one looked for the victim’s death. The incoherence does not simply correspond to an opportunist attempt to avoid responsibility for the result –even though it does not exclude that. It demonstrates more a verification of the disproportion between the individual contribution to the lynching, and the aggregate effect of the collective action –of the sum of the individual contributions.
All the events witness to the intense emotional involvement of the lynchers with their action. Six lynchings began with crowds gathered in front of the local police station where the victim had been imprisoned by the police in order to be later handed over to the judicial authorities or simply to protect them from the anger of the people. They were persons accused of the commission of crimes which were eventually turned over to the mob or captured by it to be later submitted to deadly violence. In six other cases lynchings involved aggressions toward the police authorities who tried to stop the lynching along the way.
Even though lynching is characterized by a strong dose of spontaneity –as opposed, e.g. to vigilantism which implies a relatively stable formal organization, with a clear internal hierarchy— several of the cases here recorded show the existence of a certain ritualism and some sort of previous deliberation: they are part of what we have characterized as community lynchings. Four o them included walking of the victims through the community they had offended. Hands-tied, the victim is forced to walk as he is given hits, insults, spitting, or dragged by some vehicle or animal, before being finally hung and burned to death. In addition to the torment, walking has a clearly mocking and exemplifying finality whose addressees are potential authors of actions similar to those which are blamed on the victim of the lynching, or his relatives. In the lynching conducted in the village of Tatahuicapa (municipality of Playa Vicente, Veracruz), which was given great notoriety, the entire proceedings of the lynching were videotaped, film subsequently sent to an organization of human rights of the state capital (Case 56, August 1996).
In seven other cases lynchings were preceded by community deliberations on what to do with the victim. This suggests the existence of an organization that gives a normative framework to the action, deriving from the strong cohesion of the communities where lynchings take place. Deliberations also emphasize the content of justice the authors attach to their actions. In some instances it invokes an explicit form of observance of a community law or practices and customs, as legitimization of the lynching.
This circumstance explains the inexistence of regret or guilt in those who participate in lynchings and, on the contrary, a feeling of responsibility fulfilled, together with the solidarity that eventual imprisonment activates in the community. It is not infrequent, in this sense, the launching of massive and prolonged mobilizations to obtain the liberty of the detained accused by state authorities of participating in lynchings. This also explains that in order to carry forward the lynching, violent actions are oftenly addressed against the state institutions (police, courts) that try to prevent or stop the event.
f. The victim
In almost two thirds of the recorded events there was a single victim (table 7). The victim is male in the vast majority of the instances (table 8). In five cases the lynched was a woman, but only one lynching ended with her death. In this case (the victims were accused of kidnapping children) the woman was lynched together with a man.
There is no substantial difference between the lynchers and the lynched, in terms of socioeconomic standards of living. Lynching is above all a form of violence of poor people against poor people: poor peasants, trades people, indigenous villagers, petty shopkeepers, workers, do lynch other poor peasants, other trades people, other members of the same village. It is their performance as active or passive characters of the lynching tragedy, as either executioners or victims, which differentiates the lyncher from the lynched, much more than social status or income levels.
However 24 events (almost one fourth of the total) took as a victim people who held some sort of local position of authority, and who according to the judgment of the community to which the lynchers belonged, indulged in abuses by violating rights, goods, or values either of the community or of any of its members: policemen (16 cases), government officials (four cases), local caciques (two cases), religious leaders (two cases). The hypothesis can be drawn that in these situations lynching is the collective sanction for breaking the basic commitments to collective goals that any person holding a position of authority should observe; something like a specific version of the traditional right of resistance against oppression: Fuenteovejuna without the embellishment of literature.
Lynching of outsiders is relatively frequent above all in rural communities, as well in some urban centers. This appears to be a classic case of suspicion or distrust towards what is different or unknown. The outsider generates insecurity, is seen as potentially harmful and therefore as a virtual enemy. The situation illustrates the conservatism of some forms of social organization based on deeply rooted cultural identities –something which does not have to do with socioeconomic shortcomings or primitivism, as illustrated by the ethnic and religious conflicts in several European countries. Distrust toward the outsider is related, still, with threats and dangers that are not invented by the community: kidnapping children, violating the rules and symbols of the group, scoffing at community values, and the like. These are real issues. The fear of kidnapping of children, for example, is widespread throughout Mexico, in the face of the allegations, many of them proven, of the commission of such actions. The aberration is the imputation from the beginning of these actions to people who are not part of the group itself. It is not necessary that the stranger has actually committed, or attempted to commit, the action for which they sanction him: not belonging to the group is proof enough to conviction.
It is worth to mention that, within this context, the stranger quality of the victim can refer as much to effectively belonging to another community, territory or family group, as to the result of modifications in the behavior, attitudes, and values of the subject –what we could characterize as a cultural outsider. The identity that legitimates belonging to the group is manifested externally in the observance of behaviors, rituals, values, and hierarchies: participation in traditional fiestas, involvement in community jobs, accepting cargos, and the like, whose inobservance threaten the principle of reciprocity as well the continuity of the group´s life as a social unit. Incompliance with those obligations goes against the community and indicates loss of identity; therefore, loss of the right to live in the community. The frequent expulsions from indigenous communities in southern Mexico, as punishment for shifting religious allegiances constitute another manifestation of this phenomenon of mutation of identities and cultural alienation.
Defenselessness of the victim is one of the typical traits of lynching, and it is evident in several aspects of the action. First of all, physical defenselessness, due to the tumultuous character of the operative. The victim always ends up overwhelmingly outmatched by the number of direct victimizers or helpers. Also, moral defenselessness: the lynching implies the absolute disqualification of the victim; the suspected is transformed automatically into guilty and subject to punishment; the possibility of regeneration is unthinkable. Finally, legal defenselessness: even in the cases in which the application of a customary law is invoked, the defense of the victim is not practically possible; attenuations or justifications for the behavior that blamed on him or her do not exist.
g. The motive
Lynching is experienced as a way of collective reparation vis-à-vis the offenses blamed on the victim. It is faced as a response to provocations committed by, or imputed to, him or her.
Most frequent lynchings are conducted as reactions to assaults: an action that involves physical violence leading to patrimonial detriment. Almost one fourth of lynchings were executed as a reaction to this type of aggressions (table 9). In twelve of them lynching was committed by the victims themselves –at times in collaboration with people passing by immediately after the assault. Next in order are "attacks to the community", which encompass the threatening of values, practices, or objects of relevance for the identity and continuity of the group: robbery of religious objects, scoffing at or failing to respect the community authorities, opposition to fulfilling community obligations such as jobs or contributing to fiestas, damaging the community patrimony, and the like. The victim of the lynching is accused of having violated values basic to the group lynchers belong to. In other cases it is a question of actions that in any sociocultural context evoke repudiation and are met with penalties by positive law: kidnapping children, reckless driving, assassinations, rapes.
Some of the lynchings triggered by actions of this type turn out to be disproportionate given the magnitude of the harm caused by the victim of the lynching. The idea that penalties should hold a relation of proportionality with the infraction belongs to modern Western criminal law. Yet the disproportion that is observed between the action committed by or imputed to the lynched, and the sanction via lynching indicates something more than the persistence of traditional or archaic forms of punitive norms. The petty theft of a pig, a bag of corn, or a bicycle is considered a minor crime by the most of criminal legal systems with strong urban biases. However, in populations drowning in poverty it usually inflicts a very strong harm for the victim. In these particular settings lynching can appear as a sanction much less disproportionate for the actually or supposedly harmed. Still, the application of an eye for an eye in a number of the lynchings, implies the appeal to a principle of limitation and of suitableness between the imputed action and the sanction.
The imputation of responsibility for the actions that trigger the lynching can be extended to people who did not actually participate in them, yet are considered guilty because of their friendship or some other bond with the lynched. This is a typical process of mechanic guilt as it stems from the inference of a mechanical solidarity (in the Durkheimian sense) in turn based on the belief that the offender’s entire group is responsible for his/her deeds. Mechanic guilt reveals either an insufficient development of the processes of individualization of social relations, or that imputations of responsibility are carried out by the mediation of a magical sort of causality.
h. The settings
The triggering factors of lynching take place in a particular social climate, which endows with additional graveness the event lynching is a reaction to. Lynchings are carried forward in spaces marked by insecurity, impunity, abuse, and violence, which are integral parts of daily life in contemporary rural Mexico, and also in several areas of the urban habitat of the working poor. This is a question already considered by the literature, and which has arisen persistently throughout this investigation. Lynchings take place in situations where, as in the song by Jose Alfredo Jimenez, la vida no vale nada (life is worthless).
The reigning insecurity increases accessibility to this type of conduct. Ex post justification of lynching is a recurrent one: the people resort to lynching because "the police set the criminals free", "those with educational degrees (lawyers, judges) agree with the bad people", "we are tired of nobody punishing them", "we make claims and nobody pays attention". These and other similar statements verbalize feelings of frustration or skepticism with respect to the efficacy of state institutions either to prevent the acts that make harm to them, to reach a reparation of their rights, or to punish the offender.
In several states of the Federation political conflict adds to this climate of violence and insecurity. Armed conflicts between militants of the PRI, the PRD, and rural or union organizations related to them were frequent during the time span covered by this investigation. Lynching does not seem unrelated to this background, at least in some of the events recorded. Not in the sense that militancy in a given political group or social organization turns someone into a more likely victim of lynching, but rather in that the decision to lynch turns out to be more easily made if referring to individuals who, in addition to having committed certain offenses, belong to antagonistic political or social organizations.
The already mentioned disproportion between the action imputed to the victim and the punishment, could also be related to this articulation of the specific action triggering the lynching with a wider matrix of local or regional feuds of political, religious, kinship or any other matter. In these cases the repudiation evoked by the action imputed to the lynched is reinforced by preceding local or regional conflicts. In the lynchings of Zapotitlan (case 23) it is easy to identify their connections with conflicts between family networks and political identities, which predated the actions that triggered the lynching (Vilas 2001). Something similar can be stated in the San Blas Atempa (case 15), Durazotla (Puebla, case 70) and Huetjutla (case 96) lynchings.
III. Conclusions and hypothesis for further research
Lynching is not exclusive to contemporary Mexico. As this investigation was conducted, similar actions occurred in Guatemala and Brazil, and with lesser frequency in Haiti, Honduras and Ecuador. Nor is it exclusive to multiethnic societies, to the countryside or to settings of tight communitarian bonds. During the past decade more than a dozen lynchings were executed Buenos Aires and other cities in Argentina. Nevertheless, each setting stamps the action with a particular profile and a specific meaning. Against the common backdrop of resorting to violence and to punishment by own hands there arises a wide range of triggering factors, coadjutant elements and ingredients of opportunity, which turn lynching into a synthesis of a complex matrix of far reaching tensions and conflicts. The approach adopted in the present work is one of many possibilities and does not exclude other theoretical-methodological perspectives. In-depth case studies will shed more light on such a complex subject. This section sums up some tentative conclusion from the preceding analysis.
With dramatic overtones lynching points to the conflictive coexistence of parallel normative systems within the same state, together with profound cultural discontinuities, as well to the incomplete effectiveness of state institutions and their contested legitimacy. Lynchings also picture the unequal and contradictory character of the processes conventionally called modernization, which develop much more rapidly in the formal implant of grand institutions such as parliaments, constitutional or legal prescriptions than in promoting new microsocial performances.
Lynchings witness to the unfinished character of state-building processes, as much in their cultural or ideological dimension, as in what relates to the effectiveness and legitimacy of state penetration in the social realm. The actions triggering lynchings relate to daily questions whence there is an obvious absence of state penetration –i.e. the ineffectiveness of public institutions— or state performance is considered to be illegitimate from the perspective of certain population groups. In the end, these conflicting perspectives call attention to the complexity of the processes of effective and legitimate state formation in multicultural societies, as well to the impunity that characterizes the local, everyday unfolding of not a few state agencies.
Yet it would be misleading to assess an overly strong relationship between the multiculturalism of a social formation and the propensity to resort to justice by ones own hand. Even though in a sporadic manner, lynchings are carried forward in societies of great ethno-cultural homogeneity, as in, for example, Argentina. Nor is it possible to assess a significant relation between lynchings and levels of socioeconomic development. Lynchings are registered in highly varied socioeconomic environments, and societies with similar development levels or styles (in terms of per capita income, patterns of geographical demographic distribution, or others) can differ markedly with regard to lynchings. Without rejecting the incidence of these variables, the diversity of scenarios stresses lynching as a resource for filling a void of either state presence or state legitimacy.
Lynching is framed by scenarios of profound macrosocial and macro political changes that impact severely in local microcosms. Far-reaching socioeconomic and institutional restructuring of Mexico in the 1980s and 1990s introduced widespread modifications in the daily life of the people, questioned certainties and altered routines. The magnitude of changes was aggravated by their speed. This investigation was centered in that period; yet, as briefly mentioned in the preceding section, lynchings were also conducted in other equivalent moments in Mexico’s history, even though the content and direction of social disruption were quite different to the contemporary one –e.g. agrarian reform and "socialist education" in the 1930s. In both settings the common ingredient is the tremendous shock provoked by state policies and the transformations they force in the daily lives of large groups of the population, above all the population that was already vulnerable prior to those changes. In a similar hypothetical sense one can mention the large number of lynchings recorded in Guatemala following the recent revolutionary conflict, the emergence of lynchings in Argentina after a decade of accelerated social and economic re-structuring, or racial lynchings in Southern United States after the civil war. To stand firm in this terrain requires, nevertheless, a comparative investigation focusing on a more extensive period than that considered here.
Lynching can be interpreted as a tool for conflict resolution as well for consolidating the group’s identity through either retention or re-appropriation of violence when people is dramatically confronted to the institutional normative illegitimacy of the state or to the inability or unwillingness of the state to honor its basic commitments to secure people’s life, security or belongings. Two types of lynchings can be differentiated from this perspective: 1) those which express the execution of a punitive force that the group resists to transfer to state institutions, and 2) those which involve a reappropriation of punitive force when its monopoly by the state is considered to be ineffective. In both cases the state shows itself unable to effectively mobilize its coactive potential –ultima ratio of its aspiration for legitimacy. State’s inability refers as much to the prevention of the actions blamed on the lynched, as to the lynching itself, and reaches its more evident manifestation in cases where the victim of lynching is previously taken from the hands of the state representatives (usually police officers) who had put him/her under custody.
The existence of a communitarian fabric or of strong group identities does not automatically increase the proclivity of a group of people to commit lynching, even though it does seem to augment the probability of particular forms of carrying it on: previous deliberations, appealing to an alternative normative system, etc. which do not exist in the typical urban lynching of a mob reacting to a transit accident or to an assault. It is possible to differentiate between community lynchings that play out the phenomenon of retention of punitive force by the group, and the more spontaneous ones typical of large cities, which we have characterized as illustration of the reappropriation of violence by social actors. In both cases the climate of overwhelming insecurity and past experiences with state agencies’ passivity or complicity, makes for the emotional background of lynchings. A socio-cultural climate which is particularly strong in poor neighborhoods, or in territories with larger makeup of indigenous villages, frequently submitted to a variety of discrimination procedures and institutional violence –a situation which possibly reinforces the association of resorting to justice by own hand with the preservation of communal networks of identity and solidarity. Lynching appears, for those who execute it, as a normal form of reparation for aggressions. The rapid recovery of the usual rhythm of life in the communities, neighborhoods, etc. after the execution of the lynching suggests that this is not seen by its authors as something exceptional or outside the realm of daily life; it forms part of the legitimate repertoire of responses to certain offensive actions addressed against themselves.
Community lynchings make explicit the conflict between different normative and value systems and their varied legal encoding. Even when there does not exist evidence of complicity or corruption of state institutions the conflict derives from this collision of normative systems and the hierarchy of values implicit in each of them. The enactment of the due process of law and the principle that no one can be considered to be guilty without a legal trial, can be experienced as injustice when it permits the liberty (conditional, under bail, or probationary) of the person who caused a harm, or when similar treatment is denied to the members of the group itself.
In cities lynching testifies to the people being fed up with the conditions of insecurity, violence, impunity, and police and government corruption typical of many large Latin American metropolis. As compared with the ingredients of ritualism, organization and deliberation that is registered in the community lynchings, the urban lynchings present themselves as brutal inorganic explosions of furious rage as much toward the concrete trigger as toward the state’s ineffectiveness in guaranteeing social coexistence.
The predominant scenarios for lynchings are those of poverty, oppression, subordination: the world of los de abajo –as in Mariano Azuela’s classic novel. Lynching appears, fundamentally, as violence of poor people against poor people, each sharing the same lack of institutional justice. They witness, therefore, to the ethno-cultural and class biases that discriminate access to public institutions, even in such elementary questions as people’s life, liberty, dignity, or patrimony –the values from whose defense the state is legitimized by liberal political theory.
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Appendix
Conceptual definitions
In this investigation lynching is considered 1) a collective action 2) of private and illegal character 3) capable of causing the death of the victim 4) in response to acts or conducts of the victim, 5) who finds him/herself in overwhelming numerical minority when confronted by the lynchers. This excludes, therefore, the cases of symbolic violence that are also assigned this name –for example, attacks through media or other public channels against certain people with the goal of harming their reputation, stopping courses of action, and the like.
Collective action: lynchings involve as active subjects a plurality of persons whose individual identities are subsumed into a collective actor: the lynching crowd. It is in this specific sense, more qualitative than quantitative, that lynching is executed by a crowd: the group erases the particular identities of its members. Lynchings can rely on a pre-existing permanent organization (village, community…) but as a distinct method of action it involves a loose and discrete organization, addressed to the specific action of lynching and which usually disappears subsequently to it. Conceptualized in this way lynching is differentiated from punitive actions executed by more permanent organizations, such as the Ku Klux Klan of the United States.
Of private and illegal character: the action is executed by individuals without any legal authority and do not hold a delegation of formal institutional authority; it therefore involves a violation of the legality sanctioned by the state. This differs from lynchings as actions executed by vigilantes or other groups of people to whom the government agencies delegate punitive or repressive faculties; or with police’s or army’s abuses.
Not necessarily culminating with the death of the victim as the act of lynching can be interrupted by several intervening factors (e.g. intervention by police or family members of the victim, or the victim’s escape). Yet they always imply, at least, a severe physical punishment.
In response to actions of the victim or imputed to him/her: lynching usually appears as a direct reaction to an offense. This implies that the time between the offense and the reparation is usually brief; it likewise suggests the absence of premeditation –in terms of criminal law– and on the contrary emphasizes the ingredients of spontaneity.
Numerical minority of the victim: which gives impunity to the lynchers and differentiates lynching from other forms of private violence in the same social settings –for example, conflicts between communities. Calling attention to the numerical minority of the victim avoids incurring discussions of little relevance regarding how large a crowd should be.
Sources and data base
The sources of information are the following: a) Primary sources: police and judicial records of the actions; interviews of witnesses and of participants; direct ex post observation of a number of settings; b) Secondary sources: local and national newspapers; sociodemographic and economic reports and studies from INEGI (Instituto Nacional de Estadística, Geografía e Informática) at the municipal level.
Research was conducted in 1995-98, as part of the author’s research programme at the Centro de Investigaciones Interdisciplinarias en Ciencias y Humanidades de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico (CEIICH-UNAM).
TABLES
Table 1. LYNCHINGS 1987-1998, BY POLITICAL JURISDICTION
STATE | Nº | % |
OAXACA | 19 | 18.4 |
DISTRITO FEDERAL | 17 | 16.5 |
CHIAPAS | 16 | 15.8 |
GUERRERO | 11 | 10.6 |
MORELOS | 9 | 8.7 |
PUEBLA | 8 | 7.8 |
MEXICO | 6 | 5.8 |
HIDALGO | 5 | 4.8 |
CHIHUAHUA | 2 | 1.9 |
JALISCO | 2 | 1.9 |
OTROS (1) | 8 | 7.8 |
TOTAL | 103 | 100.0 |
- Baja California, Durango, Nayarit, Tabasco, Tlaxcala, Veracruz, Zacatecas.
Table 2. LYNCHINGS BY SPATIAL SETTING
Nº | % | |
URBAN | 28 | 27 |
RURAL (1) | 75 | 73 |
TOTAL | 103 | 100 |
(1) Includes ejidos, villages, rural townships (caseríos) and the like.
Table 3. WHO LYNCHES?
Nº (a) | |
Neighbors, villagers | 88 |
Direct victims of actions of the lynched | 6 |
Relatives or friends of the victims of the lynched | 8 |
People passing by | 8 |
TOTAL | 110 |
(a)The total exceeds the number of recorded
lynchings because of the overlap of possibilities.
Table 4. OUTCOME OF LYNCHINGS
Nº | % | |
Death of the lynched | 52 | 50.5 |
Interrupted lynching | 43 | 41.8 |
Other (1) | 8 | 7.7 |
TOTAL | 103 | 100.0 |
(1) Threat of lynching
Table 5. INTERRUPTED LYNCHINGS: MOTIVES
MOTIVE | CASES |
Police intervention | 33 |
Intervention of another authority | 2 |
Voluntary interruption | 2 |
The victim escapes | 4 |
Other | 2 |
TOTAL | 43 |
Table 6. METHOD OF LYNCHING
METHOD | CASES |
Beating (1) | 54 |
Shooting | 13 |
Hanging | 9 |
Burning | 6 |
Other | 10 |
No information | 11 |
TOTAL | 103 |
- Includes stoning and beating by machete.
Table 7. VICTIMS PER LYNCHING
VICTIMS | Nº | % |
One | 60 | 58.5 |
Two | 22 | 21.3 |
Three | 13 | 12.6 |
Four | 2 | 1.9 |
More than four | 6 | 5.7 |
TOTAL | 103 | 100.0 |
Table 8. VICTIM, BY SEX
N° of Lynchings | % | |
Male | 98 | 95.4 |
Female | 4 | 3.9 |
Male and female | 1 | 0.7 |
TOTAL | 103 | 100.0 |
Table 9. TRIGGERS OF THE LYNCHING
N° | % | |
Assault | 25 | 24.6 |
Attack against the community* | 19 | 18.4 |
Assassination | 14 | 13.6 |
Rape | 12 | 11.6 |
Running over by vehicle | 10 | 9.7 |
Robbery+ | 7 | 6.8 |
Children’s kidnapping | 5 | 4.8 |
Political motivation | 4 | 3.9 |
Witchcraft | 2 | 1.9 |
Opposing to lynching | 2 | 1.9 |
Other | 3 | 2.8 |
TOTAL | 103 | 100.0 |
* Robbery against the village’s or community’s school or church;
refusing to participate in community jobs; taking advantage of community
resources for individual benefit; lack of respect for the community authorities, etc.
+ Does not involve physical violence upon the victim of the robbery (e.g.: cattle
thefts, theft of cars or working tools or other goods in the absence of its owner).
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Carlos M. Vilas
Instituto Argentino para el Desarrollo Económico y Universidad de Buenos Aires. Agradezco a Rodolfo Stavenhagen, Francisco Zapata, Arturo Alvarado, Juan José Ramírez, Alejandra Araya, Fabián Sislian, así como a dos lectores anónimos, sus comentarios y observaciones a una versión anterior de este documento. Las limitaciones subsistentes son, por supuesto, de mi exclusiva responsabilidad.
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