This text examines how democracy has supplanted political stability as the defining political concern in Mexico. Noting that the period of rather sure, stable development and growth between 1940 and 1968 had little precedent, the authors reassess power distribution and participation, the changing nature of political change, and the new struggles over the forms of accountability required by democracy.
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This text examines how democracy has supplanted political stability as the defining political concern in Mexico. Noting that the period of rather sure, stable development and growth between 1940 and 1968 had little precedent, the authors reassess power distribution and participation, the changing nature of political change, and the new struggles over the forms of accountability required by democracy.
Read Less