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GLD 2026 Spring Work-in-Progress Series - April 8

Society and economy

GLD would like to welcome you to our Spring 2025 Work-in-Progress Series. This series offers scholars from around the world an opportunity to present and receive feedback on their works in progress, including manuscripts, PAPs, conference papers, articles, etc. This series is virtual and open to anyone to attend; we look forward to seeing you there!

Seminar
Date
8 Apr 2026
Time
16:00 - 17:00
Location
Lilla Skansen and Zoom

The Spring Work-in-Progress Series will be held on Zoom and in-person in Lilla Skansen at the Department of Political Science at the University of Gothenburg. If you plan to attend virtually, please register at the link above - you only need to register once and you will have access to the whole series. 

WiP Session 6 - April 8, 16:00 CEST

The Economic Foundations of Illicit Power: DTO Strategies and Their Political Consequences in Guatemala

Diego Romero, University of Texas at Austin

Drug-trafficking organizations (DTOs) expand territorial control through both violence and institutional capture. While much attention has focused on their use of coercion, less is known about how DTOs exploit legal markets and state institutions to launder money and consolidate power. This paper investigates the relationship between commodity-driven land expansion and criminal entrenchment in Guatemala, focusing on the growth of oil palm cultivation. Leveraging exogenous shocks to global palm oil prices, we estimate the impact of DTO expansion on two outcomes: political violence and corruption in public procurement. We use municipal panel data from 2016–2023, original data on attacks against civil society actors, and detailed procurement records linked to the national investment monitoring system (SNIP). We find that palm expansion increases corruption-related contracting patterns (e.g., contracts to sole bidders or to potential shell firms) without increasing lethal violence. These results suggest that DTOs consolidate territorial control not only through violence, but increasingly through co-optation of local procurement markets.