Diferencias políticas entre los inmigrantes chinos del noroeste de México (1920-1930). El caso de Francisco L. Yuen

The Chinese  community of Northwestern Mexico was characterized by the ideological diversity of its members, mainly during  1920-1930, when the  political  differences  between the followers  of  the Chinese   Nationalist  Party   (Guomingdang) and the  members  of the  Chee Kung  Tong  were polariz...

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Velázquez Morales, Catalina
Format: Online
Langue:espagnol
Éditeur: El Colegio de México, A.C. 2005
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://historiamexicana.colmex.mx/index.php/RHM/article/view/1531
Institution:

Historia Mexicana

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Résumé:The Chinese  community of Northwestern Mexico was characterized by the ideological diversity of its members, mainly during  1920-1930, when the  political  differences  between the followers  of  the Chinese   Nationalist  Party   (Guomingdang) and the  members  of the  Chee Kung  Tong  were polarized,  reflecting the struggle for power going on in China. Francisco  L. Yuen is particularly interesting  in this setting, for besides being an entrepreneur, he was president of the Nationalist Party  and director  of the Chinese  Fraternal  Union.  His political and economic  activities  allowed  him  to  relate  to  the  most  powerful groups in the  region, which  in turn  had  access to  the  Sonora group, dominating at that moment the highest governmental circles in Mexico. Yuen's  relations  proved  decisive when authorities tried to expel him on the grounds of Article 33 of the Constitution.