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This booklet explores the role of Mexico's interaction with the United States and assesses the impact of geography on shaping the destiny of the Mexican people. Historically the United States has exerted overwhelming influence over the way that Mexico has developed economically. Most importantly, in the mid-nineteenth century the United States undermined Mexico's long-term development by dispossessing its neighbor of its most valuable lands, imposing a border that has heavily favored U.S. interests, and paving the way for the dominant U.S. economy to compete more closely and more directly with…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This booklet explores the role of Mexico's interaction with the United States and assesses the impact of geography on shaping the destiny of the Mexican people. Historically the United States has exerted overwhelming influence over the way that Mexico has developed economically. Most importantly, in the mid-nineteenth century the United States undermined Mexico's long-term development by dispossessing its neighbor of its most valuable lands, imposing a border that has heavily favored U.S. interests, and paving the way for the dominant U.S. economy to compete more closely and more directly with the much weaker Mexican economy. As a result of these events, Mexicans have had to struggle to build their country under the shadow of the powerful United States, not unlike small retailers who try to survive in the face of crushing competition from a Wal-Mart megastore located uncomfortably nearby.
Autorenporträt
Oscar J. Martínez is Regents' Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Arizona and Coordinator of the El Paso Social Justice Education Project. He has authored and edited numerous books and many articles, book chapters, and reviews. His most recent books are "Ciudad Juárez: Saga of a Legendary City" (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2018), and "Mexico's Uneven Development: The Geographic and Historical Context of Inequality" (New York: Routledge, 2016).