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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
(10pp) Tensions between civic-political and
socioeconomic-interest-based organizing have
created fertile terrain for state initiatives to
keep challengers from civil society off balance,
correspondingly this also puts a strain on media,
and non-bias reporting. Historically as well as
currently, the more sophisticated government
response has been to offer incentives to movements
to sacrifice their civic agendas in favor of their
social agendas. At the same time, each radical
reform movement was cut short by government
official repression, which in turn explains the
Costa Grande's parallel cycles of armed peasant
resistance from the Partido de los Pobres in the
1960s to today's Ejercito Popular Revolucionario.
Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BBmexmed.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
in favor of their social agendas. At the same time, each radical reform movement was cut short by government official repression, which in turn explains the Costa Grandes parallel cycles
of armed peasant resistance from the Partido de los Pobres in the 1960s to todays Ejercito Popular Revolucionario. Bibliography lists 9 sources. BBafartD.doc
BROADCAST MEDIA IN MEXICO
Written by for the Paperstore, Inc., June
2000 Introduction Most social science frameworks for analyzing relations between the Mexican state and society in the 1960s and 1970s were
designed to explain stability rather than transition. According to Wayne Cornelius (1989), editor of Mexicos Alternative Political Futures, the problem now is to explain the contours and pace
of Mexicos eclectic combination of continuity and change-its extreme variation across regions, sectors, and social groups. The broadcast media has been traditionally assigned this role in western society. In
the process, some analysts are raising serious questions about whether the classic frameworks for explaining continuity might have missed important dimensions of state-society relations, even during periods of apparent stability,
and especially for regions that did not fit generalizations developed in Mexico City. It should also be
noted that tensions between civic-political and socioeconomic-interest-based organizing have created fertile terrain for state initiatives to keep challengers from civil society off balance, correspondingly this also puts a strain on
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