Tracing the key themes and dynamics of a century of political development in Mexico, David Shirk explores the evolution of the party that ultimately became the vehicle for Fox's success.
Readers will find this widely praised work remains the most current and accessible text available on Mexico's politics and policy.
Now in its seventh edition, Politics in Mexico : the path of a new democracy has been revised and updated in order to address several major changes that have occurred since 2013, including the broad effort of Mexico to achieve a functional ...
Over the course of the thirty-one essays in The Oxford Handbook of Mexican Politics some of the world's leading scholars of Mexico will provide a comprehensive view of the remarkable transformation of the nation's political system to a ...
... Francisco Díaz de León, Isidoro Ocampo, Gonzalo de la Paz Pérez, Julio Prieto, Everardo Ramírez, Ramón Arroyo, Enrique Gutmann, Gabriel Figueroa, Emilio Amero, Agustín Lazo, Raúl Cacho, Carlos Leduc, Germán Cueto, Esperanza Hoffman, ...
This title examines Mexican politics in the wake of Cardenismo, and the dawn of Miguel Aleman's presidency. This new book focuses on the decade of the 1940s, and analyzes Alcmanismo into the early years of the 1950s.
In this book, Victoria Rodríguez offers the first comprehensive analysis of how Mexican women have taken advantage of new opportunities to participate in the political process through elected and appointed office, nongovernmental ...
In the first book on party formation conducted at the regional level after the Mexican Revolution, Sarah Osten examines processes of political and social change that eventually gave rise to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), which ...
Designed as an introduction to the history and mechanism of Mexican politics, this well-known text works within the larger framework of comparative politics. Combining the clarity and accessibility of the...
In this history of the social and human sciences in Mexico and the United States, Karin Alejandra Rosemblatt reveals intricate connections among the development of science, the concept of race, and policies toward indigenous peoples.
Covers the period from 1968 to 1989.