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.
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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