Abstract
Colombia’s democratic left faces four formidable but surmountable challenges in the realm of security: a hegemonic discourse of politics and security that is extremely right-wing, a persistent politics of fear, the security implications of the recent feeding frenzy for both legal and illicit transnational capital, especially with regard to labor and the strategic problems linked to contraband, and the consequences of former president Uribe’s success in quenching a thirst for order in the wake of the chaotic 1990s, including the colossal and growing U.S. strategic presence in the country.
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