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The Bridge Called Zapatismo

Latin American Perspectives, 2010
Study of a social movement in Los Angeles called Casa del Pueblo reveals the limitations of current theory on transnational social movements and advocacy networks. Whereas current theory tends to view the diffusion of political culture as a one-way process whereby Western ideas diffuse from the wealthier North to the Third World, Casa del Pueblo was ...
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The Politics of Zapatismo

2007
Enough is enough! So declared the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) that emerged from the jungles of southern Mexico to occupy the town of San Cristobal de las Casas on New Year’s Day 1994. On the same day that the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was proclaimed, the Zapatistas declared NAFTA a ‘death sentence for Indigenous people’.
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Zapatismo and the Legitimacy of Indigenous Rights

Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies, 2011
The Moral Force of Indigenous Politics: Critical Liberalism and the Zapatistas. By Courtney Jung. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2008.
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Zapatismo and Urban Political Practice

Latin American Perspectives, 2005
On January 1, 1996, the Ejercito Zapatista de Liberaci6n Nacional called for the creation of the Frente Zapatista de Liberaci6n Nacional (FZLN), a national civil Zapatista organization that would build a new kind of political movement (EZLN, 1996). This new organization would be built from the ground up by citizens committed to carrying out Zapatista ...
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Zapatismo in Mexico and Cyberspace

2008
On New Year’s Eve, 1993, rebels in ski masks took control of four county seats in southern Mexico. Before fading back into the jungle, barely ahead of the Mexican Army, the rebels distributed the first and only edition of their newspaper, the Mexican Alarm Clock, briefly captured a radio station, and sent faxes to the news media, giving their reasons ...
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Zapatismo Seen from Inside and Out

Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies, 2007
Mi Paso por el Zapatismo (un Testimonio Personal). By Octavio Rodriguez Araujo. Mexico DF, Editorial Oceano, 2005. Understanding the Chiapas Rebellion: Modernist Visions and the Invisible Indian.
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Zapatismo Resurgent Land And Autonomy In Chiapas

NACLA Report on the Americas, 2000
AbstractThe repeal of land reform legislation in 1992 robbed many peasants not just of the possibility of gaining a piece of land, but, quite simply, of hope. For the Zapatistas, this was the straw that broke the camel’s back, leading them to launch their January 1, 1994 uprising.
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The Communist Roots of Zapatismo and the Zapatista Uprising

Perspectives on Global Development and Technology, 2017
This study suggests that communist politics had much deeper roots in the larger indigenous-campesino movement that formed the social base of the Zapatista National Liberation Army (ezln) than has previously been acknowledged. Tracing the political development of the indigenous communities of Chiapas, Mexico from the late nineteenth century to the ...
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