Focuses on U.S.-Mexican relations in postrevolutionary Mexico, placing Cardenas's agrarian reform--including the nationalization of American-owned Mexican farmland--in an international context.
Focuses on U.S.-Mexican relations in postrevolutionary Mexico, placing Cardenas's agrarian reform--including the nationalization of American-owned Mexican farmland--in an international context.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
John J. Dwyer is Associate Professor of History at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Illustrations ix Acknowledgments xi Introduction: The Interplay between Domestic Affairs and Foreign Relations 1 Part I. Domestic Origins of an International Conflict 1. The Roots of the Agrarian Dispute 17 2. El asalto a las tierras y la huelga de los sentados: How Local Agency Shaped Agrarian Reform in the Mexicali Valley 44 3. The Expropriation of American-Owned Land in Baja California: Political, Economic, Social, and Cultural Factors 77 4. Domestic Politics and the Expropriation of American-Owned Land in the Yaqui Valley 103 5. The Sonoran Reparto: Where Domestic and International Forces Meet 138 Part II. Diplomatic Resolution of an International Conflict 6. The End of U.S. Intervention in Mexico: The Roosevelt Administration Accommodates Mexico City 159 7. Diplomatic Weapons of the Weak: Cárdenas's Administration Outmaneuvers Washington 194 8. The 1941 Global Settlement: The End of the Agrarian Dispute and the Start of a New Era in U.S.-Mexican Relations 232 Conclusion: Moving away from Balkanized History 267 Notes 85 Bibliography 343 Index 371
List of Illustrations ix Acknowledgments xi Introduction: The Interplay between Domestic Affairs and Foreign Relations 1 Part I. Domestic Origins of an International Conflict 1. The Roots of the Agrarian Dispute 17 2. El asalto a las tierras y la huelga de los sentados: How Local Agency Shaped Agrarian Reform in the Mexicali Valley 44 3. The Expropriation of American-Owned Land in Baja California: Political, Economic, Social, and Cultural Factors 77 4. Domestic Politics and the Expropriation of American-Owned Land in the Yaqui Valley 103 5. The Sonoran Reparto: Where Domestic and International Forces Meet 138 Part II. Diplomatic Resolution of an International Conflict 6. The End of U.S. Intervention in Mexico: The Roosevelt Administration Accommodates Mexico City 159 7. Diplomatic Weapons of the Weak: Cárdenas's Administration Outmaneuvers Washington 194 8. The 1941 Global Settlement: The End of the Agrarian Dispute and the Start of a New Era in U.S.-Mexican Relations 232 Conclusion: Moving away from Balkanized History 267 Notes 85 Bibliography 343 Index 371
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