Control and cooptation in Mexican politics. [TR 16]

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Abstract/Contents

Abstract

The authors identify a structure of widely-shared, interrelated goals, including political stability, economic growth, public welfare, and economic nationalism in contemporary Mexico. They relate those goals to the contemporary structure of Mexican governments. They also describe patterns of oligarchy, cooptation, dissent, and repression, and relate those patterns to the goal structure. This TR was published by the authors (1966) and reprinted in Horowitz et al. (1969).
[Abstract by Murray Webster, 2014.]
Published in International Journal of Comparative Sociology,7 (No. 1), March 1966, pp. 13-30.
Reprinted in 1.1.. Horowitz, et al. (eds.), Latin American Radicalism, Vintage Books, 1968.

Description

Type of resource text
Date created August 1965

Creators/Contributors

Author Anderson, Bo
Author Crockcroft, James D.
Publisher Stanford University, Department of Sociology, Laboratory for Social Research

Subjects

Subject cooptation
Subject government - organizational structure
Subject nationalism - Mexico
Subject oligarchy
Genre Technical report

Bibliographic information

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial No Derivatives 3.0 Unported license (CC BY-NC-ND).

Preferred citation

Preferred Citation
Anderson, Bo and Crockcroft, James D.. (1965). Control and cooptation in Mexican politics.Technical Report 16, Laboratory for Social Research, Stanford University Department of Sociology. Stanford Digital Repository. Available at: http://purl.stanford.edu/yn042rv7128

Collection

Laboratory for Social Research Technical Report Series (1961-1985), Stanford University Department of Sociology

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