Indigenous groups, globalization, and Mexico's Plan Puebla Panamá : marriage or miscarriage?

Bibliographic Information

Indigenous groups, globalization, and Mexico's Plan Puebla Panamá : marriage or miscarriage?

Imtiaz Hussain

E. Mellen Press, c2006

Search this Book/Journal
Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [301]-324) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Designed to build Central American infrastructures, Mexico's Plan Puebla-Panama (PPP) was launched in 2001 but collapsed hopelessly by 2003. A content analysis finds the Washington consensus severely at odds with indigenous cultures, while invoking the broader globalization-localization debate. The book also examines the fate many modern chief executives facing under similar circumstances.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • 1. Introduction - After the Sexenio Crisis: A Los Pinos Crisis?
  • 2. Glocalization, Fragmegration, and Chaord: Architectural Discord, Theoretical Triage
  • 3. Sputtering Past and Paradigm Porosity: Mexico's Central American Malaise
  • 4. Kiss of Life or Love? Imported Oxygen and Collective CA Action
  • 5. PPP Nuts and Bolts, Humps and Bumps: Riding a Paper Roll?
  • 6. Gasping Grassroots and Evasive Elites: Backbone-Building in a War Zone
  • 7. Taking Flings? Central America in Northern Embrace
  • 8. At the End of the Rope: Hanging, Swinging, or Leaping Over?
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Page Top