Narco-capitalism
Narco-capitalism (derivatives: narco-state, narco-economy) is a pejorative neologism meant to express criticism of a state's policies and practices surrounding the international illegal drug trade. The terms are standard words with the prefix "narco-", defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as "associated with the trade in illegal drugs".[1] It is a pejorative term meant to criticize and express disfavor about a government's drug policies; no state calls itself a narco-state as a neutral descriptor — thus, who uses the term, and in what context, is significant to understanding its intended meaning. For example, Guinea-Bissau has been called a "narco-state" due to government officials often being bribed by traffickers to ignore the illegal trade.[2]
See also
References
- (2002). Title of an online essay: "The Narco-State Cometh"[3]
- (2006). An anonymous US official on Afghanistan: "Now what they have is a narco-economy. If they do not get corruption sorted they can slip into being a narco-state,".[4]
Notes
- ↑ "narco-". Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. September 2005. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ↑ Washington Post newspaper: Guinea-Bissau coup: Prime minister arrested for helping drug trade, military says, 13 April 2012} "Analysts told the AP that in Guinea-Bissau, traffickers have bought off members of the government and military, turning the country into a 'narcostate.'"
- ↑ "The Narco-State Cometh", Kuro5hin March 20, 2002.
- ↑ "Afghan opium cultivation hits a record", by Fisnik Abrashi, Associated Press, August 16, 2006.