Results 61 to 70 of about 251 (92)

State Repression in Mexican Social Movements: Tlatelolco y Ayotzinapa

open access: yes, 2017
This paper attempts to analyze a facet of the Mexican government’s corruption; the first goal is to understand the injustices faced by the Mexican people that led to El Movimiento Estudiantil, the Student Movement of 1968.
Castellanos, Ana Karen
core  

Recordando y reconstruyendo una memoria: una crónica del Comité 68 y el Movimiento de 1968 en México

open access: yes, 2019
The world witnessed the unabashed 1968 Tlatelolco Massacre in Mexico City, which has since remained a stain in the country’s history. The murder of those in protest marked the extinguishing of a national student movement that called for the honoring of ...
Navarro, Emmanuel
core  

De la «muerte florida» al activismo civil: Elena Poniatowska rompe el fuerte silencio ancestral

open access: yes, 2008
Elena Poniatowska’s activism is the background for the exceptional chronicle of La noche de Tlatelolco. The wide rage of voices lends the story reality and truthfulness. She has the abilty to make the victims of the massacre come to life before and after
Egan, Linda
core  

Protest and the PRI: Examining US-Mexican Relations, 1968-1971

open access: yes
A green flare shot up in the air, lighting the sky. A red flare shortly followed. As a suprised crowd looked up, a hail of bullets turned a pepaceful student protest into a massacre at ...
Glenn, Jake
core  
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Díaz Ordaz and the Student Massacre at Tlatelolco

1992
In the eyes of most historians the Tlatelolco massacre of 2 October 1968, when scores (perhaps hundreds) of unarmed student demonstrators in a central square of Mexico City were shot dead by the military, was the central act of the Diaz Ordaz presidency.
Philip George
exaly   +2 more sources

Anti‐Communism, Communism, and Anti‐Interventionism in Narratives Surrounding the Student Massacre on Tlatelolco Square (Mexico, 1968)

open access: yesBulletin of Latin American Research, 2018
Shortly before the Mexico Olympics, on 2 October 1968, student demonstrators were shot by the military on Tlatelolco Square in Mexico City, thus ending the local student movement and its mass protests. This paper explores the government's use of anti‐communism to ideologically justify this massacre in the context of the Cold War.
ELISA KRIZA, Kriza, Elisa
openaire   +3 more sources

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