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The politics of Mexican development

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The article was published on 1971-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 174 citations till now.

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Calculating Pragmatism: The High Politics of the Banco Ejidal in Twentieth-century Mexico

TL;DR: In this article, it is assumed that ejidal credit peaked during Cardenas's administration in two major ways: first, it was in this period that the most loans from the EJidal credit societies received from the Banco Nacional del Credito Ejidal, and second, during the same period the bank clearly and unanimously embraced social reform goals over orthodox banking goals.
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Hegemonic power networks and institutional configuration for illicit purposes

TL;DR: Some Mexican scholars, like Salvador Maldonado-Aranda or Alfredo Zavaleta-Betancourt, have adopted the concept of "margins of the state" to analyse different aspects of illegality and organized crime as mentioned in this paper.
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The Politics of Economic Nationalism in Postrevolutionary Mexico

TL;DR: The origins of this association lay in post-revolutionary conflicts between economic liberals and protectionists over state consolidation and industrial centralization, and the ensuing conflicts between the two over how to defend Mexico's sovereignty in turn became central in larger rifts over the interrelated processes of industr ial centralization and state consolidation.
Journal Article

Impacts of Economic Integration on the Computer Sector in Mexico and the United States

TL;DR: This research has been supported by grants from the Sloan Foundation, the Computation and Social Systems Program in the Computer, Intelligent Systems and Engineering (CISE) Division and the International Program of the Social and Behavioral Sciences (SBE) Division of the U.S. National Science Foundation.
Journal ArticleDOI

State, Dependency, and Nationalism: Revolutionary Mexico, 1924–1928

TL;DR: The domestic and global forces that shaped Mexico's revolutionary struggle of 1910-17 continued to shape its state-building conflicts during the 1920s as mentioned in this paper, and despite the revolution's populist and nationalist aura, by the late 1920s it had done little more than subordinate the masses to an even more centralized state and deepen Mexico's dependence on United States governmental and capital interests.