Swarm of earthquakes, #Wandalismo and anticorruption mobilizations in Puerto Rico: Latinx criminology and state crimes

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

A 6.4 magnitude earthquake struck Puerto Rico on 7 January 2020, adding a new episode to the multilayered political, economic, and humanitarian crisis affecting the island since 2006. This article demonstrates how the recovery efforts and management of the emergency constitute a state crime. The analysis draws from governmental and journalistic investigation and engages with legal and critical discourse analysis to provide a criminological and sociolegal analysis of state crimes in Puerto Rico–which feature prominently in US colonial and racialized history and anticorruption policies in PR–and of the genealogy of colonial violence that generates these and other legalized and state-facilitated harms. The article analyzes legally contrived states of exception and executive orders used to manage the earthquake emergency, the cases of corruption and criminal negligence (so salient in the public conscience that structural critiques of incompetent, unethical, and extractive governance have been coalesced by popular movements under the hashtag #wandalismo), the legislative public hearing on the case of the government hoarding and stalling distribution of disaster supplies, and the anticorruption mobilizations of January 2020. The article articulates the timeliness and urgency of prioritizing research and theorizing of state crimes within the burgeoning field of Latina/o/x criminology.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)587-608
Number of pages22
JournalLatino Studies
Volume21
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 14 2024

Keywords

  • Colonial state crimes
  • Corruption
  • Disaster
  • Exceptionality
  • Latina/o/x criminology

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Cultural Studies
  • History
  • Sociology and Political Science

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