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The Mexican Revolution

2018
When rebels captured the border city of Juárez, Mexico, in May 1911 and forced the abdication of President Porfirio Díaz shortly thereafter, they not only overthrew the western hemisphere’s oldest regime but also inaugurated the first social revolution of the 20th century.
Michael J. LaRosa, Germán R. Mejía
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The Mexican Revolution

2021
Abstract Beginning in 1930, Frank Tannenbaum pioneered what came to be known as a populist (or post-revisionist) interpretation of the Mexican Revolution, arguing that the mass mobilization of the revolutionary decade (1910–1920) forced state builders and intellectuals to find a place in political life for the poor and indigenous of the ...
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The Mexican Revolution and Health Care or the Health of the Mexican Revolution

International Journal of Health Services, 1983
Despite a victorious social revolution, a self-proclaimed “revolutionary” government, and a significant post-war economic growth, Mexico has not achieved a just or equitable social system. The Mexican Revolution led to the emergence of a new bureaucratic class whose “trickle-down” development strategy sacrificed social welfare to capital accumulation.
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The Institutionalisation of the Mexican Revolution

Journal of Inter-American Studies, 1969
“This period [1928-1934] between the murder of Obregón and the election of Lázaro Cárdenas is most perplexing,” wrote one of the most perceptive foreign observers of the Mexican scene some years ago. “If it were possible to discover what had taken hold of the leadership of Mexico in those debased and clouded years, it would illumine much of Mexican ...
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Mexican Americans and the Novel of the Mexican Revolution

2013
I examine how early twentieth-century Mexican American writers responded to the Mexican Revolution, arguing that they grappled with the war's meanings and consequences in ways that were shaped by their positions as border subjects marginalized by and alienated from the national cultures of both Mexico and the United States.
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