# Drug Markets, Violence and the City. European Ports in the Transnational Cocaine Value Chain.
**Date de l'événement :** 07/04/2025
* Publié le 07/04/2025

### Image(s)
![Première page du dossier "Drug Markets, Violence and the City" représentant un espace portuaire](https://firebasestorage.googleapis.com/v0/b/memory-sp-pr.appspot.com/o/prod%2F1y7CgDOTakHDiB3dgoi0%2FprojectsMedias%2FGDwxqoCkPlaNMpkVqGO9%2Fthumbs%2FCapture%20d'%C3%A9cran%202025-09-18%20182502_sve4n_1600x900.png?alt=media&token=e400cd8f-cf2d-4532-8753-71fc89e97a34) 

## Auteur(s)
Daria Lysenko, Nils Lagreve, Ane Baz Landa, Jiangnan Wang

## Tuteur(s)
Gabriel Feltran, Paolo Campana

## Partenaire(s)
MILDECA

## Description
**Ce projet est issu des travaux des élèves du Master Urban Governance, Policy and Planning, spécialité Governing the Large Metropolis (GLM) de 2024-2025 :**  
  
PRÉFACE de Gabriel Feltran, tuteur  
  
This research project was carried out by four Master's students from the “Governing the Large Metropolis” program at the Urban School of Sciences Po, as part of their Capstone Project. Over the course of one semester, Daria, Jiangnan, Nils, and Ane explored the semi-wholesale cocaine trade in Germany and Spain — a crucial but often overlooked segment situated between the well-studied wholesale and retail markets. Their investigation focused on the actors, infrastructures, and transactions that link large-scale importation to street-level distribution, shedding light on a key but under-researched layer of the cocaine economy.  
  
Over the past decade, the cocaine trade into Europe has grown significantly, driven by the platformisation of international markets and the resulting surge in European supply. These transformations have reshaped the governance dynamics of global value chains, with deep implications for urban violence, public health, and the logic of state responses. Understanding these shifts is essential to crafting more effective and context-sensitive policy strategies — and the semi-wholesale level plays a pivotal role in connecting global flows to local impacts.  
  
The project was developed under the academic supervision of Gabriel Feltran and Paolo Campana at Sciences Po, and in close collaboration with David Weiberger from MILDECA (Interministerial Mission for Combating Drugs and Addictive Behaviors). The partnership between Sciences Po and MILDECA has produced a number of important outcomes in recent years, and this research stands out as one of the most significant. It demonstrates how Capstone projects can generate valuable insights at the intersection of academic research and public policy.

**Accéder à la synthèse du projet :** [https://www.sciencespo.fr/ecole-urbaine/sites/sciencespo.fr.ecole-urbaine/files/MILDECA_GLM_SYNTHESE%202025.pdf](https://www.sciencespo.fr/ecole-urbaine/sites/sciencespo.fr.ecole-urbaine/files/MILDECA_GLM_SYNTHESE%202025.pdf)

### Type(s) de ressource
`#Texte` 

### Discipline
`#Urbanisme` 

### Thématique(s)
`#Politiques publiques` `#Économies` `#Gouvernance / régulation` `#Santé / maladies / épidémies` 

### Aire(s) géographique(s)
`#Europe` 

### Langue(s)
`#Anglais` 

### Famille(s) de contenu
`#Production étudiante` 

### Type(s) d'accès
`#Accès libre` 

### Hébergeur(s)
`#Ecoweb` 

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