
Benjamin Lessing
CDDRL and CISAC Postdoctoral Fellow
CISAC
Stanford University
Encina Hall, C242
Stanford CA 94305-6165
Research Interests
Criminal Conflict; Organized Crime; Armed Violence; State and Non-state Authority; Small-arms Networks
Benjamin Lessing's Curriculum Vitae (75.3KB, modified August 2012)
Benjamin Lessing is a recent Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of California, Berkeley. He is a joint postdoctoral fellow at the Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law (CDDRL) and the Center on International Security and Cooperation (CISAC), and will join the Political Science faculty at University of Chicago as assistant professor in 2013.
Lessing studies 'criminal conflict'—organized armed violence involving non-state actors who, unlike revolutionary insurgents, are not trying to topple the state. His doctoral dissertation examines armed conflict between drug trafficking organizations and the state in Colombia, Mexico and Brazil. Additionally, he has studied prison gangs’ pernicious effect on state authority, and the effect of paramilitary groups’ territorial control on electoral outcomes.
Prior to his graduate work, he conducted field research on the licit and illicit small arms trade in Latin America and the Caribbean for international organizations like Amnesty International, Oxfam, and the Small Arms Survey, as well as Viva Rio, Brazil’s largest NGO, and was a Fulbright Student Grantee in Argentina and Uruguay.
Publications
Events & Presentations
Muslims in France: Identifying a Discriminatory Equilibrium
October 18, 2012 Social Science Seminar
David Laitin, Benjamin Lessing- CDDRL-CISAC Special Seminar: The Logic of Violence in Drug Wars: Cartel-State Conflict in Mexico, Brazil and Colombia
December 22, 1998 CISAC, CDDRL Special Seminar
Benjamin Lessing



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