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

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Everything to do with the USA's own Imperial Backyard. From hispanics to the originary peoples of the americas to the diasporas, South America to Central America, to the Caribbean to North America (yes, we're also there).

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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] 14 points 3 days ago (4 children)

Maybe I’m uninformed here, but Biden deported more people than Trump and Harris wanted to restrict asylum access, but now that republicans are going to be back in power again they have a “border czar”? Really? Was Obama “The Deporter in Chief” not a border czar? I guess at least now liberals will oppose bad things republicans do that their team was already doing

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

Hello nerds catgirl-heart

i survived on 2 hours of sleep today catgirl-flop

now im just going to make sure none of you mention the current what-time-is-it here catgirl-peace

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[–] [email protected] 9 points 3 days ago

jerma-unhinged DON't COMB UR HAIR

FORGET HOW TO CLEAN STUFF nineteeneightyfour

[–] [email protected] 14 points 3 days ago (2 children)

what on earth is with jobs that have a 55 hr/week schedule. just hire more people dummy

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[–] [email protected] 20 points 3 days ago (2 children)

There are dems saying they need a liberal Joe Rogan.

They’ve had Chapo Trap House all this time

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[–] [email protected] 16 points 3 days ago (1 children)

I hate having a car. I hate having a job.

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 3 days ago

you gotta hand it to our intrepid job creators for taking these lowly wizards in off the streets

[–] [email protected] 14 points 3 days ago (3 children)

lost my old pc to water damage and one of the worst things is that i lost this image someone posted on the old chapo discord of their chilies on the garden channel that was literally so beautiful to me when i was super down... chili person if ur out there that pic made my year

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[–] [email protected] 9 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Made stock tonight, I swear a mug of piping hot broth is incredible for one's mental health.

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 3 days ago (3 children)

was texting with my most recent ex about hanging out for the first time since the break up and i have this strange feeling that we're...gonna probably successfully be friends? this is weird. this has never happened to me before. is this what Growth feels like?????

(for those on the deep soylent lore this is ex situationship not ex partner, wouldn't be surprised if i never hear from the latter again sadly)

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[–] [email protected] 14 points 3 days ago

going to be stressful trying to stay ahead of whatever wild stuff the trump admin tries to do with the economy in the U.S.

i know, good for the rest of the world but bad for those of us trapped here

i'll be burning a lot of mental energy trying to stay ahead of it. if anyone has any meager assets they want to protect not sure what massive tarrifs, or economic shock therapy might do

if anyone has any good Marxist based economic historical knowledge and could help comrades navigate what comes down the pipe that would be cool.

obviously plenty of the wallstreetbets set, etc are using/will be using these opportunities to make money but i really don't care about that.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 3 days ago (1 children)

People playing Pokemon Pocket see non-stop Mewtwo and Articunos and defend it by saying "there's always gonna be a meta game".

Are the people truly so devoid of imagination? Why are they so eager to accept that things are shit? So ready to reject the possibility for improvements? It is no different than their eager embrace of capitalism's accelerating consumption of Earth. In this 73 hour video essay, I-

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 3 days ago

The OAS has reported serious irregularities in the /c/fakenews vote guaido

[–] [email protected] 10 points 3 days ago (1 children)

they need to make weed gummies that are like 0.5mg each so I can eat a lot of them and only get moderately high

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