The Mexican Revolution's wake : the making of a political system, 1920-1929
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Mexican Revolution's wake : the making of a political system, 1920-1929
(Cambridge Latin American studies, 108)
Cambridge University Press, 2018
- : hardback
Available at 4 libraries
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Description and Table of Contents
Description
Throughout the 1920s Mexico was rocked by attempted coups, assassinations, and popular revolts. Yet by the mid-1930s, the country boasted one of the most stable and durable political systems in Latin America. In the first book on party formation conducted at the regional level after the Mexican Revolution, Sarah Osten examines processes of political and social change that eventually gave rise to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), which dominated Mexico's politics for the rest of the twentieth century. In analyzing the history of socialist parties in the southeastern states of Campeche, Chiapas, Tabasco, and Yucatan, Osten demonstrates that these 'laboratories of revolution' constituted a highly influential testing ground for new political traditions and institutional structures. The Mexican Revolution's Wake shows how the southeastern socialists provided a blueprint for a new kind of party that struck calculated balances between the objectives of elite and popular forces, and between centralized authority and local autonomy.
Table of Contents
- Introduction: Mexico's search for peace and postrevolutionary political institutions
- 1. The socialist crucible: Yucatan, 1915-1922
- 2. Revolutionary laboratories: the spread of socialism across the Southeast, 1915-1923
- 3. Putting the system to the test: The de la Huerta rebellion in the Southeast, 1923-4
- 4. A harder line: socialist tabasco, 1920-27
- 5. The forgotten revolution: socialist Chiapas, 1924-7
- 6. Closing ranks: socialism and anti-reelectionism, 1925-27
- 7. A nation of parties
- Conclusion: hard lessons.
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