Democracy in Mexico. Attitudes and perceptions of citizens at national and local level, offers an important contribution to one of the more complex and multifaceted political processes of recent decades in Latin America: Mexico’s democratisation at the national and subnational levels. The chapters - on topics including the quality of democracy, political participation and insecurity, amongst others - have been researched and written by a group of academics from the University of Salamanca and El Colegio de México, with the support of the Spanish Agency for International Cooperation and Development (AECID) and the Mexican Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT). Importantly, the volume is based on two surveys carried out throughout Mexico in 2009 and in 2011. The result of this period of collaboration is one of the few existing studies on democratic processes in the Mexican states, which we hope will provoke an important debate within the academic community.
págs. 1-8
Democracy in the Mexican states: a subnational analysis
págs. 9-29
págs. 31-55
Political protest: Who is mobilising and why?
págs. 57-83
págs. 85-111
Partisan identity and democracy in the Mexican states
Reynaldo Yunuen Ortega Ortiz, Ma. Fernanda Somuano Ventura, Andrés Ruiz Pérez
págs. 113-145
Political campaigns, temptation and voting: An analysis of electoral clientelism in Mexico
págs. 147-172
Satisfaction with the functioning of democracy: Differences between Mexican states
págs. 173-196
Civils rights: insecurity, institutions and infringements
págs. 197-217
"Estamos hasta la madre": Making victims visible in Mexico´s current "crime epidemic"
págs. 219-244
Mexico, a decade on from alternation: understanding the forms of democracy and citizenship that exist today
págs. 245-280
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