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Sovereignty, Authority and Power

Sovereignty, Authority and Power. "Every end of the century since the 18th century has witnessed the same pattern: long periods of peace, order and progress followed by political violence and revolution .” Mexican Historian Enrique Krauze. Overview. Lots of political turnover

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Sovereignty, Authority and Power

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  1. Sovereignty, Authority and Power

  2. "Every end of the century since the 18th century has witnessed the same pattern: long periods of peace, order and progress followed by political violence and revolution.” • Mexican Historian Enrique Krauze

  3. Overview Lots of political turnover Won independence from Spanish in 1821 Independence did not change structure drastically Highly unstable in early 20th century Military Generals ruled until mid-20th century Presidents were essentially dictators until recently Economic growth in late 20th century and early 20th century Currently undergoing democratization

  4. Stages of Mexican History • Colonialism (16th Century – Revolution in 1810) • Chaos (1810-1990) • Development (Late 20th Century- present)

  5. Legitimacy • Considered a legitimate government • Revolution of 1910-1917 is major source of legitimacy • Admire Revolutionary Leaders • Benito Juarez • Emilio Zapata • Pancho Villa • Charisma is valued highly • Formation of PRI (Institutionalized Revolutionary Party) in 1929

  6. Historical Traditions • Authoritarianism • Started by Spanish • Current President holds lots of authority • Populism • Strong Leaders • Elite Splits • Politicos vs. Tecnicos • Instability • Presidential candidate assassinated in 1994

  7. Political Culture • Sense of National Identity • Religion (Catholic) • Patron-clientelism (camarillas) • Hold Mexican politics together • PRI defeat indicated decline • Corruption • Caused by camarillas • Dependency • Spain (colonialism) • United States (recent times)

  8. Colonization (1517-1810) Conquered the Aztecs (Hernan Cortez) 1521 Brought Christianity (official religion) Slavery of indigenous people Established Spanish style of government Spanish became official language of colonies

  9. Chaos (1810-1910) • Independence from Spain in 1810 • 44 governments in 33 years • No sense of stability • Separation of Church and State • Porfiriato • Porfirio Diaz (1870-1908) • Authoritarian • Conservative • Modernized • Income gap increased • Stepped down to allow democracy in to the government

  10. Stability? (1910-1994) 1910 ‘Epic Revolution’ led by Emiliano Zapata and others Uprising led by Pancho Villa in 1910’s New Constitution in 1917 PRI established in 1929 (see next slide) Peaceful transition from authoritarian to democratic Numerous assassinations PRI held power for decades (71 years)

  11. Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) • Established in 1929 • Transition from authoritarian to democratic • Written Constitution • Democratic Government • Three Branches • Strong Leaders • Ruling Party for Decades • Political Monopoly • Lost power in late 20th Century • PRI lost presidency and a house in Congress in 2000 • Future role in Mexico is uncertain • Current President is PRI • Ruling party for 71 years

  12. ‘Mexican Miracle’ (1930-1970) • During first four decades of PRI rule • Major figure was Lazaro Cardenas • Orderly transition from authoritarian to democratic • National development • Copied Soviet Union • GDP increased by 500% • Population only doubled • Peso-dollar parity maintained • Protectionism • Subsoil law (constitutional) • Utilized “ISI” • Import Substitution Industrialization

  13. 1994 NAFTA signed in 1994 (January 1st) Uprising in Chiapas Assassination of leading presidential candidate Peso devalued Government leaders investigated Political turnover PRI losses a house in Congress Increased debt Oil losses value

  14. Recent Mexico • Recovery • Paying back debts to United States • Fair election in 2000 • Mexico Today • Labeled “newly industrialized country”, “transitional democracy”, and “developing” • Purchasing Power Parity of $9800 (fairly high) • 58% of workforce in service sector • Fairly confusing country politically • Political future is uncertain • Drug cartels

  15. Geographic Influence • Mountains and Deserts • Difficult communication • Regionalism • Natural Resources • Plentiful • Misused • Border with United States • 2000 miles long • Causes political tension

  16. Geography (cont.) • 100 Million People • Population Growth of 1.8 percent • Top 10 most populous countries • Urban Population • Movement away from rural areas • ¾ of population lives in cities • 18 million in Mexico City • Varied Climates • “Long” country

  17. But the reason then and now has always been the same • Mexican Historian Enrique Krauze

  18. Why Mexico Can’t Catch a Break Political Economic Social Structural Religious History of Mexico Drug Cartels

  19. “Mexico has not been able to solve its basic problem, which is to find out how we should govern ourselves.” • Mexican Historian Enrique Krauze

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