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POS 203: 11282006

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San Diego Union Tribune. March 23, 2004 Article. ... Soborno bribe to government official to protect traffic. La compra de la plaza. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: POS 203: 11282006


1
POS 203 11/28/2006
  • Course status.
  • Paper assignment 3 due Thursday.
  • Final exam guide distributed December 7.
  • Final paper due 12/14, draft feedback guaranteed
    by evening of 12/12.
  • Final Exam Monday December 19th, 1100-130pm.
  • Course Agenda
  • Lecture/Discussion.
  • Mexico.
  • Presentations.
  • Mexican Revolution, PRI hegemony, EZLN.

2
  • Human Development Index.
  • UNDP Website animations re HDI and other
    indicators.
  • Poverty and State Failure.
  • State Failure Project.
  • 1300 variables on every country 1955 1998.
  • Definition of State Failure
  • Revolutionary wars.
  • Ethnic wars.
  • Adverse regime changes. Major, abrupt shifts in
    patterns of governance.
  • Genocides and politicides.
  • Mexico makes it into State Failure Project.

3
  • Mexico Indicators of Development.

4
  • Mexico Indicators of Development..

5
  • Mexico Indicators of Development.

6
  • Mexico Indicators of Development.

7
  • Mexico HIV/AIDS as of end of 2003. Source WHO.
  • Reasons less than US Conservative culture, lower
    urbanization rates, underreporting, dynamics of
    disease diffusion.

8
  • Pobre Mexico! Tan lejos de Dios y tan cerca de
    los Estados Unidos.
  • Mexico in 19th Century.
  • US-Mexican War.
  • Rise of Díaz and the Porfiriato.
  • Classic Liberalism.
  • Encourage foreign investment, European
    immigration, concessions to US and European
    investors.
  • Ruthless repression of peasants and labor.
  • Mexico in the 20th Century.
  • Growing resentment against Díaz.
  • Mexican Revolution highly complex multiple
    fronts and actors.
  • Anarchists and peasant/rural revolts.
  • Provides much of the symbolic stock form Mexican
    political culture.
  • Revolutionary consolidation - Cardenas.
    Nationalization.
  • Eventual development of the PRI 1934-2000?
    (perhaps power resumes in 2006).

9
  • Mexico Contemporary Problems.
  • Early signs of fragmentation of PRI.
  • Student revolt 1968.
  • National Security Archives.
  • Tlatelolco Massacre.
  • Mexicos Dirty War.
  • 1994 Major Political Instability and Transition
    from PRI dominance to contested hegemony.
  • EZLN uprising January 1st, 1994.
  • Video 1 Subcomandante Marcos interview.
  • PRI Reformist Candidate Colosio Assassination
    March 1994.
  • 10th Anniversary last year.
  • San Diego Union Tribune. March 23, 2004 Article.
  • Nacotics Cartels penetration/corruption of
    Mexican polity (including security organs and
    federal and local political elites).

10
  • Elections 2006.
  • Latin America.
  • Washington Post.
  • Election Map.
  • Mexico 2006 Election.
  • Contested for 2 months.
  • Protests continue
  • Oaxaca, Mexico.
  • Indymedia coverage.
  • US journalist Brad Will killed.

11
  • Article ODay, Patrick. 2001. The Mexican Army
    as Cartel. Journal of Contemporary Criminal
    Justice. 7(3) 278-295.
  • Origins back as far as 1960s cultivation of small
    marijuana fields.
  • Mid 1980s Military Police providing escort for
    narcotics shipments.
  • Growing literature in early 1990s to present
    detailing cartel penetration of Mexican military.
  • Difficult to research.
  • National Context.
  • Soborno bribe to government official to protect
    traffic.
  • La compra de la plaza.
  • Findings of article.
  • Corrupt Mexican military units disguise smuggling
    as military maneuvers.
  • Details a number of engagements in Rio Grande
    area between US Border Patrol and Mexican
    Military units.
  • US beginning to attempt to train Mexican Army
    special forces for counternarcotics, initially
    successful, but penetrated by cartels.
  • Militarization of border, militarization of
    Mexican society as possible outcome.

12
  • Mexico Contemporary Problems.
  • Videos
  • Drug cartel related violence US Mexico
    spillover (CNN 11/23/2006).
  • Frontline AFO Cartel (PBS 1999).

13
  • US Influence Global and Regional (Latin
    American) Patterns in Narcotics Trafficking.
  • UN.
  • Office on Drugs and Crime.
  • 2006 World Drug Report.
  • OAS
  • Inter American Drug Abuse Control Commission.
  • United States.
  • DEA.
  • Narco-Terrorism Website.
  • Department of State.
  • Plan Colombia.
  • Dept. of Treasury
  • FINCEN.
  • Political Instability Task Force/State Failure
    Project.
  • Phase 5 Reports.

14
  • Global Narcotics Trafficking Patterns (UNODCP WDR
    2006).

15
  • Global Narcotics Trafficking Patterns (UNODCP WDR
    2006).

16
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18
  • Narcotics Trafficking2.

19
  • Narcotics Trafficking2.

20
  • Narcotics Trafficking3.

21
  • Narcotics Trafficking3.

22
  • Narcotics Trafficking3.

23
  • Narcotics Trafficking.

24
  • Narcotics Trafficking.

25
  • Narcotics Trafficking.

26
  • Global Drug Seizures (UNODCP WDR 2004).
  • 2006 Seizures 34 billion consumption units.

27
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29
Thinking About Mexico
  • The Basics
  • Poverty
  • Diversity
  • Big Brother is Watching

30
Thinking About Mexico
  • Key Questions
  • Why was the PRI so dominant for so long?
  • What undermined that success?
  • Why was structural adjustment embraced?
  • How have those economic reforms addressed
    Mexicos needs?
  • How have events of the past two decades affected
    the Mexico-US relationship?

31
The Evolution of Mexican Politics
  • The colonial era
  • Independence
  • The revolution
  • Institutionalizing the revolution
  • Cárdenas and his legacy
  • An institutional revolutionary party

32
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34
Political Culture
  • National identity
  • Authoritarianism
  • Patron-client relations
  • Political sub-cultures

35
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36
Political Participation
  • The PRI and its hold on power
  • The other parties
  • PAN
  • PRD
  • The people, the PRI, and civil society

37
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39
The Mexican State
  • Nonreelection and presidential domination
  • The cabinet, the bureaucracy and the judiciary
  • Congress and the legislative process
  • The federal system
  • The military
  • Corporatism and corruption

40
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41
Public Policy
  • Debt and Development
  • Early success
  • The crisis
  • Reform
  • Debt reduction
  • Sharp cuts in government spending
  • Privatization
  • Opening up the economy
  • US-Mexican relations
  • Immigration
  • Drugs

42
Feedback
  • Mexican newspapers, magazines, and television
    stations are seemingly independent of government
    control, but it rarely took on PRI governments
  • PRI had virtual monopoly on newsprint and
    provided underfunded papers with information
  • The press censored itself for the most part
  • Pressures to open up the media have been building
    and have had an impact more independent outlets
  • Opening up of the economy and the technological
    revolution have brought in more media that are
    not controllable by the government
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