1st Edition

Mexico's Political Stability The Next Five Years

By Roderic Ai Camp Copyright 1987
    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    Mexico is undergoing its worst economic cr1s1s since the world depression of the 1930s. In this volume contributors analyze significant patterns that might affect political stability and legitimacy, economic viability, and social change over the next several years, often reaching controversial conclusions. They argue, for example, that the military is not likely to change its present civil-military role; that political opposition, rather than political violence or pressure from foreign governments, will have the most profound influence on the changing pattern of political legitimacy and system stability; and that decision-making in the private sector may have the greatest potential to resolve or exacerbate the current crisis. Finally, they suggest that because economic conditions have been altered so dramatically in the recent period, Mexican policymakers will need to develop a new range of political alternatives to stabilize the economy and redirect the country's future.

    Overview -- The Political Consequences of Changing Socialization Patterns -- How Will Economic Recovery Be Managed? -- Distributional and Sectoral Problems in the New Economic Policy -- Leadership and Change, Intellectuals and Technocrats in Mexico -- The Impact of Major Groups on Policy-Making Trends in Government-Business Relations in Mexico -- The Evolution of the Mexican Military and Its Implications for Civil-Military Relations -- What Explains the Decline of the PRI and Will it Continue? -- Potential Strengths of the Political Opposition and What It Means to the PRI -- The Implications of the Border for Mexican Policy and Mexican-United States Relations -- The Implications of Central American Conflicts for Mexican Politics

    Biography

    Roderic A. Camp is director of Latin American Studies and chair of the Behavioral Sciences Division at Central College, Pella, Iowa.