El Salvador: A Carceral State of Terror
El Salvador: A Carceral State of Terror
Friday, March 27, 202610:00 AM - 11:30 AM (Pacific)
In-person: Sala Fernando Benítez, Building F, Faculty of Political and Social Sciences, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico (Mexico City)
*Please note that the in-person event is at 11:00 am local time in Mexico City
Livestream: Via YouTube
The Democracy Action Lab (DAL) at the Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law (CDDRL), Stanford University, in collaboration with the Faculty of Political and Social Sciences (FCPyS) and the Center for Sociological Studies (CES) of the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, invites you to the presentation of the research: “El Salvador: A Carceral State of Terror”
ABOUT THE EVENT
Nayib Bukele, President of El Salvador, is currently one of the most popular leaders in Latin America. Much of this support stems from the perception that his administration has successfully addressed the country’s most pressing issue: gang-related violence.
To achieve this, Bukele implemented a state of exception, repeatedly extended, which allows military and police forces to detain individuals — primarily young men from low-income backgrounds — without judicial warrants. This security strategy has gained international attention and has become a reference point for political actors across the region.
However, this apparent success carries significant costs.
Dr. Beatriz Magaloni, together with a research team from the Democracy Action Lab at Stanford University, conducted an in-depth field investigation into the consequences of the state of exception in El Salvador.
The study includes fieldwork in both urban and rural areas, over one hundred hours of interviews, and qualitative analysis of testimonies and institutional dynamics.
KEY FINDINGS
The findings align with warnings from national and international human rights organizations, as well as leading media outlets. They point to severe human rights violations, including mass detention of innocent individuals without due process, the systematic use of torture in detention centers, and cases of enforced disappearance.
Dr. Magaloni characterizes this system as a “carceral state of terror.”
Additionally, the research highlights that the system has created economic incentives that disproportionately affect impoverished families, has become a tool to silence dissent and political opposition, and is contributing to significant democratic backsliding in the country.
SPEAKERS
Dr. Beatriz Magaloni — Graham H. Stuart Professor of International Relations, Senior Fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, and Co-director of DAL
Dr. Alberto Díaz-Cayeros — Senior Fellow at Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Professor, by courtesy, of Political Science, and Co-director of DAL
Mr. Manuel Ortiz — Journalist, sociologist, and Audio Visual Consultant at the Democracy Action Lab
- Dr. Christian Ascensio — Full Professor at the Faculty of Political and Social Sciences at UNAM