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"An insightful firsthand examination of Mexico from 2000 to the present.
Based in Mexico City, foreign correspondent Tuckman looks at the
political and economic arenas of Mexico since the overturn in 2000 of
the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), its long-term ruling party.
When the National Action Party (PAN), led by Vicente Fox, took power,
many Mexicans viewed this as a breath of fresh air, bringing change and
hope to the country. However, Tuckman reveals that the ensuing 12 years
have not lived up to that optimism, with the wheels of democracy slow to
move in a country riddled with corporate greed, political corruption
and escalating drug wars. The author's concentrated inspection gives
readers a close look at the lawlessness of the numerous powerful drug
cartels instilling fear in locals, migrating workers and even mainstream
media with daily kidnappings and murders of those who stand in their
way. Tuckman delves into racial discrimination, global warming and
environmental concerns regarding Mexico's large oil fields, as well as
the rise in floods and clean-water issues in Mexico City. She also
examines the revolutionary actions of the Zapatistas in Chiapas and a
flare-up in Oaxaca in 2006 that bears comparison to the uprisings seen
recently in the Middle East. Not all is lost, however, as recent
presidents have attempted to "regreen" deforested areas, tourism
continues to rise, and Mexican food products are found around the world
thanks to trade agreements. With the upcoming presidential election,
Mexicans are once again hoping for a political leader who can
"kick-start the levels of growth required to transform the country from a
bastion of poverty and inequality into a burgeoning middle-class
nation." An important investigation of Mexico's recent political,
economic and social past--and its possibilities for the future" (Kirkus Reviews)
Current Affairs
Monday, September 17, 2012
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