this post was submitted on 09 Nov 2024
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América Latina & Caribe

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The ejidos and agrarian communities are the form of land tenure that covers most of the surface in the Mexican countryside; these offer important agricultural and livestock production and most of the hills, forest areas, mangroves, coasts, water, mines and various natural attractions are in their lands

The ejido in Mexico

Mainly associated with the revolutionary agrarian reform, which projected the agrarian law of 1915 as collective, undivided land that could not be sold or inherited. Throughout the 20th century, its legislation underwent various changes, in accordance with the economic and political projects of the governments in power.

The key element to understanding the introduction of ejidos in Mexico as an integral part of the laws that followed the Mexican Revolution is the historical context in which the country found itself. Historian Emilio Kouri, in his article “The Invention of the Ejido”, speaks of the ejido as a social result of the Mexican armed struggle that was the revolution, but rather as a temporary response to the social demands of the revolution.

“That a revolution destroys what is unjust or does not work in order to try something new and different -with or without success- is the usual thing, and in the case of Mexico the agrarian reform of the Revolution invented the ejido. There should be no doubt that it is a modern invention, as will be seen below. The ejido was born as a provisional, almost accidental arrangement, but in less than two decades it was consolidated as the main instrument for governmental redistribution of land (...).

However, the ejido became a major piece in the policy of agrarian distribution in Mexico, more as a political tool to establish rural peace after the fall of Porfiriato than as an effective tool to fulfill the demands of the peasants; for the post-revolutionary war period, these aspects of communal restitution and indigenous property spaces provided by the creation of the ejidos resulted in a practical policy of control. In this regard, Kourí also mentions in his article the following:

“Thus, for both political and historical reasons, the solution to the agrarian problem at that time was clear: communal property was what the humblest people of the countryside (the Indians above all) understood best, what was most convenient to their present needs and, moreover, apparently, what the Zapatistas in arms on the other side of the Ajusco said they wanted(...).

January 6 marks a century since, in the midst of a great civil war, the Carrancista faction enacted an agrarian law in Veracruz that unintentionally marked the beginning and course of the most extensive agrarian reform in the modern history of Latin America. Throughout more than seven decades, the governments emanating from the Revolution gave way to an enormous transformation of the legal order and the social distribution of rural property in Mexico.

Pushed first by the demands and struggles of new peasant organizations and soon also by the irresistible attraction of its clientelist potential, the Revolution ended up distributing a lot of land, and not only bad land. Cardenismo (assisted by the Great Depression) broke up a good part of the large haciendas, demolishing without a second thought a long-lived economic and social institution that symbolized not only the consolidation of territorial property and local power since the mid-19th century, but also the legacy of conquests, subjections and viceregal depredations.

By 1991, when the Constitution was amended to put an end to the repartition, more than two-thirds of Mexico's land and forests had been subject to agrarian reform. There is much to debate about the costs and benefits, the vices and virtues, or the aspirations and failures of the Revolution's land distribution, but in any case, what is certain is that the magnitude of that institutional change in land ownership is comparable only to that which occurred as a result of the Spanish conquest in the sixteenth century.

El ejido, símbolo de la Revolución Mexicana*

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[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 days ago (5 children)

Is it just me or is globalisation not a major political issue now. Like five years ago I feel like everyone was talking about it, now it feels like other political issues have taken it's place.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Globalization protests were huge in the late 90s (after the fall of the Soviet Union). I'm thinking of WTO '99 "battle in Seattle". Things shut up after 9/11 & Iraq as neoliberalism became encased as a permanent fixture in global society. I'm more surprised it has a resurgence, unless you mean right wing "globalization" fears, which is just white supremacist anxiety

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 days ago

I still think NAFTA probably lies at the heart of ever Democrat electoral loss in the 21st century.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago

All conservative issues are like jangly keys and rattles, they’re only mad about whatever one the media is waving in their face atm they don’t actually give a shit about anything

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago

it's still there it's just evolved into mask off china bad racism IMO

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 days ago

It's an enormous political issue that informs all of national politics throughout the imperialist countries. The issue is that it has reached the point of no return, finance capital has successfully deindustrialized the west, and therefore the thing politics revolves around now is "which group are we gonna sacrifice to keep the ball rolling" and people kinda half forgot how we got here in the first place.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 days ago

"Globalization" was opposition to the neoliberali world economy. The Battle of Seattle in '99 was kind of the last battle in that war. After Seattle cops developed the Miami Method of protest repression and street protests became largely ineffective. Then the Iraq invasion took all the wind out of the movements sales.

"Globalism" means the Jews and it freaks me out when msm use it bc what the entire fuck?