INEGI: Fewer Mexicans Feel Unsafe in Their Cities — but El Mencho’s Death Sparked Sharp Spikes in Jalisco
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2 Articles
INEGI: Fewer Mexicans feel unsafe in their cities — but El Mencho’s death sparked sharp spikes in Jalisco
Perceptions of insecurity in Mexico have fallen to their lowest level since President Claudia Sheinbaum took office, but around six in ten Mexicans still consider their city an unsafe place to live, according to the results of the latest National Survey of Urban Public Security (ENSU). Conducted by the national statistics agency INEGI between Feb. 23 and March 13 with adult residents of 27,300 households in 91 urban areas across Mexico, the firs…
The perception of insecurity in Mexico remains one of the main indicators to understand the relationship between citizenship and urban environment. According to the National Urban Public Security Survey (ENSU) of the INEGI, at the end of March 2026, 32.3% of the population of 18 years and more considered that their local government is very or somewhat effective to solve the most important problems. At the national level, only three cities exceed…
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