1st Edition

Mexico-United States Relations The Semantics of Sovereignty

By Arturo Santa-Cruz Copyright 2012
236 Pages
by Routledge

246 Pages
by Routledge

246 Pages
by Routledge

Sovereignty is a key factor to consider when studying the Mexico-United States relationship. During most of the twentieth century, as a result of the new character of the Mexican post-revolutionary regime, there was a decoupling between the state’s maximalist discourse on sovereignty, and its practice. Sovereignty as an undifferentiated whole does not exist; it should instead be disaggregated... Read more

Introduction  1. Sovereignty, Identity and Revolutionary Nationalism  2. Sovereignty at Stake  3. Everyday Economic Relations  4. Everyday Socio-Political Sovereignty  5. Political Stability, Democracy, Electoral Observation, and Human Rights.  Conclusions

Biography

Arturo Santa-Cruz is Associate Professor at the Department of Pacific Studies and Director of the Center for North American Studies, University of Guadalajara, Mexico.

"This fresh and insightful analysis of U.S.-Mexico relations shows that 'sovereignty is what states make of it.' Santa Cruz provides a well-documented account of the construction of sovereignty attentive to the shifting players and dynamics of IPE, security, and normative issues."

—Alison Brysk, University of California, Santa Barbara