From ejido to metropolis, another path : an evaluation on ejido property rights and informal land development in Mexico City

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Bibliographic Information

From ejido to metropolis, another path : an evaluation on ejido property rights and informal land development in Mexico City

David Cymet

(American university studies, Series XXI, Regional studies, vol. 6)

P. Lang, c1992

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [263]-275)

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The factors behind the failure of land use planning in Mexico City, as reflected in the concentration of 65% of its population in irregular settlements, are explored in this book. It documents the structural role that the lack of secure property rights of the ejidos, the surrounding peasant communities, played in determining such an outcome within the context of the national economic policy of import-substitution industrialization which favored Mexico City's growth. An original policy proposal, whose significance is broader than the specific case of Mexico City, presents an alternative based on privatization of the ejidos in the urban periphery and the establishment of land development trusteeships for low-income settlements within the framework of an urban land reserve planning system.

Table of Contents

Contents: Mexico City growth, import-substitution industrialization, land-use planning failure, land property rights, irregular settlements, suburban ejidos, ejido history, ejido legislation, the Lerdo Law, the 1917 Constitution, article 27, agrarian reform, privatization of ejido land, land reserves, ecological reserves.

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