Format:
Online-Ressource (347 p)
ISBN:
9780742554900
Series Statement:
Critical Currents in Latin American Perspective Series
Content:
Now in an updated edition, this groundbreaking study develops a new approach to understanding the formation of the postrevolutionary state in Mexico. Adam David Morton links the rise and demise of the modern Mexican state to ongoing forms of class struggle that have shaped and restructured state and civil society. He thus sheds valuable interdisciplinary light on debates on state formation by recovering radical tools of analysis, such as uneven development and class struggle, for the wider study of past and present politics in Mexico and, more broadly, Latin America. A substantive
Note:
Description based upon print version of record
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Contents; Illustrations; Acknowledgments; Acronyms; Chapter 01. Coordinates of Revolution, State, and Uneven Development in Modern Mexico; Part I: Constructing Revolution and State in Modern Mexico; Chapter 02. Mexican Revolution, Primitive Accumulation, Passive Revolution; Chapter 03. Capital Accumulation, State Formation, and Import Substitution Industrialization; Chapter 04. Neoliberalism and Structural Change within the Global Political Economy of Uneven Development; Part II: Contesting Revolution and State in Modern Mexico; Chapter 05. Intellectuals and the State
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Chapter 06. The Political Economy of Democratization and Democratic TransitionChapter 07. Uneven Agrarian Developmentand the Resistance of the EZLN; Chapter 08. Conclusion; Epilogue; References; Index; About the Author; About the Book
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9781442229457
Additional Edition:
Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Revolution and State in Modern Mexico : The Political Economy of Uneven Development
Language:
English
Keywords:
Electronic books