Resultados da pesquisa - "Institutional Revolutionary Party"

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  1. La reforma política de Manuel Ávila Camacho Loaeza, Soledad

    Historia Mexicana

    2013
    “...This paper reconstructs the liberal reform project that inspired the changes proposed by Ávila Camacho regarding elections and political parties and which culminated in the introduction of the 1946 Electoral Federal Law and the foundation of the PRI (Institutional Revolutionary Party). The context of the Cold War, however, defeated the president's original intention and strengthened the defense of the statu quo by actors related to Cardenist corporatism, particularly the CTM (Confederation of Mexican Workers). ...”
  2. El ocaso del latifundio Greene: ilegalidad, política internacional y agrarismo en la frontera Sonora-Arizona, 1954-1958 Grijalva Dávila, Miguel Ángel

    Historia Mexicana

    2018
    “...It also illustrates how the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) regime was able to reduce social pressures and avoid unrest in the countryside in the mid-20th Century. ...”
  3. La importancia de gobernar. La administración de Enrique Peña Nieto y la caída del PRI Hernández Rodríguez, Rogelio

    Foro Internacional

    2025
    “...Despite its long-standing disrepute and the loss of executive power for the first time in 2000, the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) managed to maintain a prominent political position among the electorate, as evidenced by its continued representation in the federal Congress and state governments. ...”
  4. Del clientelismo político a la contrainsurgencia. La masacre de copreros en Acapulco, Guerrero en perspectiva histórica: 1940-1967 Ávila Coronel, Francisco

    Historia Mexicana

    2024
    “...This article addresses the process of domination and political clientelism by the Mexican state in its coercive relations with the peasants of coastal Guerrero, who were coopted by the Institutional Revolutionary Party in the Regional Union of Copra Producers of the state of Guerrero (URPCEG), the state’s most important peasant organization, which had been hegemonically controlled by caciques since its founding. ...”

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