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Mexico experienced political tension and rising economic instability throughout the second decade of the twentieth century. [8] The late 1960s and early 1970s saw multiple protests from students and left-wing groups against PRI's authoritarian rule, to which the government responded with a crackdown that culminated in the infamous Tlatelolco ...
Liberalism in Mexico "was not only a political philosophy of republicanism but a package including democratic social values, free enterprise, a legal bundle of civil rights to protect individualism, and a group consciousness of nationalism." [2] Mexican liberalism is most closely associated with anticlericalism. [3]
Democracy in Mexico: Peasant rebellion and political reform. South End Press, 1995. Ortiz-Ortega, Adriana, and Mercedes Barquet. "Gendering transition to democracy in Mexico." Latin American Research Review (2010): 108–137. Preston, Julia, and Samuel Dillon. Opening Mexico: The making of a democracy. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005.
When Mexico's governing party unveiled the winner of its poll to pick a Mexico City mayoral candidate, the result was clear - but the male victor quickly had to give way to female runner-up Clara ...
The Institutional Revolutionary Party (Spanish: Partido Revolucionario Institucional, Spanish: [paɾˈtiðo reβolusjoˈnaɾjo jnstitusjoˈnal], PRI) is a political party in Mexico that was founded in 1929 as the National Revolutionary Party (Spanish: Partido Nacional Revolucionario, PNR), then as the Party of the Mexican Revolution (Spanish: Partido de la Revolución Mexicana, PRM) and ...
Mexico voted on Sunday and the polls going into Sunday’s vote were not wrong. The current vote count shows that a majority 53% voted for Obrador’s left-wing Monero. Can Obrador make a real ...
LAPOP has its origins in studies of democratic values in Costa Rica. This pioneering public opinion research took place in the 1970s, a time in which much of the rest of Latin America was under the control of authoritarian regimes, prohibiting studies of public opinion. [1]
What to know about the Mexican election: Who are the candidates in Mexico's presidential race? What does it mean for the border and cartel violence?