RT Article T1 Conflict Management in Illicit Drug Cryptomarkets JF International criminal justice review VO 27 IS 4 SP 237 OP 254 A1 Morselli, Carlo A2 Décary-Hétu, David A2 Aldridge, Judith 1963- A2 Paquet-Clouston, Masarah LA English YR 2017 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1750956578 AB Illegal drug markets have been described as “stateless” systems. Drug dealers, moreover, are commonly considered to have a predilection toward the use of violence to resolve disputes arising from dealing activities. While some studies have undermined this popular perception, new trends surrounding the distribution of illegal drugs via online channels (drug cryptomarkets) have shifted the transactional setting from the physical to virtual realm, thus decreasing the likelihood of violent resolution outcomes even further. This article examines conflict management strategies within cryptomarkets by coding discussion forums between vendors and buyers. Violence, as expected, is absent. Strategies more likely reflect alternatives that have been recognized in conflict management research within and beyond illegal market settings: tolerance, avoidance, ostracism, third-party intervention, negotiation, and threats. The overall setting from which such resolutions emerge is clearly not subject to formal regulations, but our analyses illustrate the multitude of informal social control mechanisms that are consistently at play and which underlie the self-regulatory and communal processes that are firmly in place. K1 Conflict Management K1 Cryptomarkets K1 Illegal drugs K1 Self-regulation K1 Violence DO 10.1177/1057567717709498