Mexico: From Montezuma to NAFTA, Chiapas, and BeyondBrassey's, 1996 - 227 páginas In this fascinating thousand-year history of America's controversial and rapidly changing neighbor, a leading expert on Latin America explains how Mexico's present and future flow directly from its past. Going well beyond analyses of recent crises, Mexico is an engrossing introduction to the Indian civilizations, the harsh rule of the Spaniards, social violence and revolution, and the country's mercurial relationship with the United States up to the present. |
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Página 72
... European power , it would violate the 1823 Monroe Doctrine and would be contrary to U.S. foreign policy , which emphasized no new colonization by European powers and no transfer of territories in the New World among those powers . As ...
... European power , it would violate the 1823 Monroe Doctrine and would be contrary to U.S. foreign policy , which emphasized no new colonization by European powers and no transfer of territories in the New World among those powers . As ...
Página 88
... Europeans protested bitterly . For a while , European powers had been contemplating intervention in Mexico . England , France , and Spain studied the possibility of occu- pying Mexico to impose peace and collect their debts . The U.S. ...
... Europeans protested bitterly . For a while , European powers had been contemplating intervention in Mexico . England , France , and Spain studied the possibility of occu- pying Mexico to impose peace and collect their debts . The U.S. ...
Página 104
... European immi- gration in part because Europeans were considered better workers . While millions of immigrants came to the United States and Latin America , primarily Argentina , Chile , and Uruguay , only about one hun- dred thousand ...
... European immi- gration in part because Europeans were considered better workers . While millions of immigrants came to the United States and Latin America , primarily Argentina , Chile , and Uruguay , only about one hun- dred thousand ...
Contenido
Understanding Mexico | 3 |
Mexicos Natural Environment | 8 |
and Native Peoples | 9 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 18 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
administration advocated areas army assassinated Aztec Aztec society became border California capital Cárdenas Carranza caudillos Central century Chiapas Chiapas uprising Church civil colonial conservative constitution corruption Cortés Creoles Crown culture decades defeated democratic developed Díaz Echeverría economic ejidos elections empire encomienda European forces French groups guerrilla Hispanic Huerta immigration important increased independence Indians and mestizos industry influence issue Juárez labor land Latin American leaders leadership Lerdo Ley Lerdo liberal Library of Congress López Portillo Madero major Maximilian Mayan ment Mesoamerica mestizos Mexi Mexican history Mexican revolution Mexican-Americans Mexico City military million NAFTA North numerous Obregón Olmec organized party percent political population Porfirio Díaz president presidential Press Quetzalcoatl rebellion reforms regime region revolutionary rural Salinas Sandinistas Santa Anna sectors social society Southwest Spain Spaniards Spanish Teotihuacán territory Texas throughout tion Toltecs trade U.S. citizens United uprising Veracruz violence Zapatista Zedillo