







The Online Journal & Network of ASPA’s
Section for Public Management Practice

American Society for
Public Administration
COMMENTARY

Mexico’s Perfect Storm: Using the Narcotrafico Threat to Build Governance Capacity in the U.S. and Mexico
By Don Klingner
It’s easy to see the impact of “drug wars” on daily life when you travel around Mexico. TV and newspapers are full of stories about kidnappings, assaults and murders, especially in hard-
Being a frequent visitor from the U.S. doesn’t help. At least until recently, most Mexicans have considered themselves innocent bystanders, hostages to an insatiable U.S. demand. Now, even as indisputable evidence of active Mexican involvement in drug trafficking mounts and its fundamental effects on Mexican society seem irrefutable, recent disclosures seem to confirm the U.S. government’s active complicity (and culpability) in gun-
U.S. and Mexican Perspectives
Within the U.S., perspectives on Mexico tend to reflect the negative consequences of Mexican immigration – legal and illegal – on public education, health and criminal justice systems. Many citizens, including naturalized immigrants, have long decried illegal immigration and our lack of a coherent national immigration policy. Conservatives tend to resist the influx of unassimilated foreigners and frequently appeal for “English-
Because our perspective on Mexico reflects our preoccupation with Mexican immigration, we in the U.S. are relatively less informed about how Mexicans view us, and why:
• Mexicans generally think the U.S. is prejudiced against them and their country. The U.S. is Mexico’s largest trading partner, and Mexico is our third largest (after China and Canada). Despite this close economic interdependence, Mexicans generally feel that U.S. foreign policy toward Mexico oscillates between extremes (neglect and intervention), in reactionary and short-
• Mexicans view U.S. immigration based on their own economic and social priorities. The fence, border security and the costs and risks associated with human trafficking lead many to remain in Mexico. In many villages, the flight of working-
Three Types of Cooperation
Yet drug trafficking and violence, on top of these existing perceptions and conditions, create an unrecognized opportunity to build relationships with Mexican counterparts (state, local, national and NGOs) for the long term, because they represent a shared threat to public administrative capacity on both sides of the border. Three types of cooperation seem worth strengthening:
• Strategic Research Exchanges. U.S. and Mexican universities should maintain and improve relationships with Mexican counterparts through visiting scholar exchanges, reciprocal scholarships, and joint degree programs. For several years, under the leadership of Juan de Dios Pineda, Cheo Torres and President David Schmidly, the University of New Mexico has pursued strategic relationships with Mexico and Latin America through the Lat-
• Education and Training through Professional Associations. Professional associations build administrative capacity organizations and individuals by increasing individual and organizational competence. In the U.S., these include the American Management Association (AMA – including a public and nonprofit division), the American Society for Public Administration (ASPA), the American Planning Association (APA), the Association for Public Policy and Management (APPAM), the American Political Science Association’s (APSA’s) Public Administration Section, the Association for Research in Non-
• ASPA’s Global Good Governance Network. The American Society for Public Administration (ASPA) has been pursuing a "going global" strategy since 2006. These efforts are resulting in the establishment of a global "good governance" Internet portal. Through this portal, practitioners around the world can share information about promising “smart practice” innovations.
So let’s accept that a crisis is too good to waste, and use the threat caused in Mexico and the U.S. by drug trafficking to build long-
Donald Klingner is a Distinguished Professor in the School of Public Affairs of the University of Colorado Colorado Springs, former president of the American Society for Public Administration, current president of the ASPA International Chapter, a Fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration, co-