Market Dynamics and Systemic Violence: A Longitudinal Examination of Market Penetration, Entry Deterrence, and Excess Capacity in the Illicit Drug Market

Authors

  • Christopher E. Torres Department of Criminology and Justice, Loyola University New Orleans, USA.
  • Stewart J. D’Alessio Steven J. Green School of International and Public Affairs, Florida International University, USA.
  • Lisa Stolzenberg Steven J. Green School of International and Public Affairs, Florida International University, USA.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/rraass/v3/2408G

Keywords:

Drug dealing, drug incarceration drug sales offending, systemic violence, market dynamics

Abstract

The nexus between lethal violence in the drug market and drug-selling behavior remains a topic of interest among social scientists. Although the current body of literature demonstrates strong empirical evidence of systemic violence, questions still endure as to the underlying causal mechanisms responsible for this violence. This study uses 10 years of prosecution data aggregated at the county level to investigate whether drug-related homicide is predictive of first-time drug-selling offending. Results from a pooled cross-sectional time-series analysis suggest that new entrants are using lethal violence to penetrate the illegal drug market. As drug-related homicides increase, the percentage of first-time offenders being prosecuted for a drug-selling offense increases markedly. This relationship persists even after controlling for non-drug-related homicide. This finding suggests that new drug sellers are primarily using lethal violence, possibly to help them gain entry into a competitive drug market.

Published

2023-12-20

How to Cite

Christopher E. Torres, Stewart J. D’Alessio, & Lisa Stolzenberg. (2023). Market Dynamics and Systemic Violence: A Longitudinal Examination of Market Penetration, Entry Deterrence, and Excess Capacity in the Illicit Drug Market. Recent Research Advances in Arts and Social Studies Vol. 3, 20–41. https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/rraass/v3/2408G