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The agrarian dispute: the expropriation of American-owned rural land in postrevolutionary Mexico
2008, Duke University Press
in English
0822342952 9780822342953
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Book Details
Published in
Durham
Table of Contents
Introduction: the interplay between domestic affairs and foreign relations
Domestic origins of an international conflict
The roots of the agrarian dispute
El asalto a las tierras y la huelga de los sentados: how local agency shaped agrarian reform in the Mexicali Valley
The economic, social, and cultural forces behind the federal expropriation of American-owned land in Baja California
Domestic politics and the expropriation of American-owned land in the Yaqui Valley
The Sonoran reparto: where domestic and international forces meet diplomatic resolution of an international conflict
The end of u.s. intervention in Mexico: Roosevelt's administration accommodates its southern neighbor
Diplomatic weapons of the weak: Cørdenas's administration outmaneuvers Washington
The 1941 global settlement: the end of the agrarian dispute and the start of a new era in U.S.-Mexican relations
Conclusion: moving away from Balkanized history
Notes
Bibliography
Index.
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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- Created October 17, 2008
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