This thesis explores rural development strategy in Mexico within the context of infrastructure development. It finds that although the tenants of decentralization and neoliberalism on which the strategy is based are conducive to gains in productivity, equity, and environmental sustainability in rural Mexico, the current government apparatus creates a number of market failures which limit the beneficial potential of the development strategy. Lessons learned from the Mexican experience should be applied in other contexts for development strategies
Mexico’s economy began a process of economic liberalization in the 1980s that continued through the ...
The debate over the orientation of modernization and development is one that has occupied scholars f...
Poverty levels have been diminishing in Mexico since the late 90's, although several regions still s...
Rural depopulation generates deep territorial imbalances, threats regional food security, and causes...
The development of the Mexican rural sector is vital because it is the source of raw materials neede...
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in th...
The Mexican national Payment for Ecosystem Services (PES) programs pay rural landholders for hydrolo...
The conflated pattern between poverty, rurality, and indigeneity in Mexico signifies drastic inequal...
Poverty in rural areas of countries with medium income, as in the case of the Mexican economy, is st...
xi, 244 leaves : ill. ; 28 cm.Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 225-244)...
This paper aims to scrutinize the concept of sustainability in rural development projects by focusin...
The fight against poverty in the rural area has ceased to be a priority in some countries, as the re...
In situations where inequality and ethnicity are important aspects of poverty, policymakers need to ...
The rural poverty in Mexico is mainly due to the lack of access to basic services, resources, techno...
This research is about how development practice is produced by development bureaucracies. In 2001, t...
Mexico’s economy began a process of economic liberalization in the 1980s that continued through the ...
The debate over the orientation of modernization and development is one that has occupied scholars f...
Poverty levels have been diminishing in Mexico since the late 90's, although several regions still s...
Rural depopulation generates deep territorial imbalances, threats regional food security, and causes...
The development of the Mexican rural sector is vital because it is the source of raw materials neede...
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in th...
The Mexican national Payment for Ecosystem Services (PES) programs pay rural landholders for hydrolo...
The conflated pattern between poverty, rurality, and indigeneity in Mexico signifies drastic inequal...
Poverty in rural areas of countries with medium income, as in the case of the Mexican economy, is st...
xi, 244 leaves : ill. ; 28 cm.Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 225-244)...
This paper aims to scrutinize the concept of sustainability in rural development projects by focusin...
The fight against poverty in the rural area has ceased to be a priority in some countries, as the re...
In situations where inequality and ethnicity are important aspects of poverty, policymakers need to ...
The rural poverty in Mexico is mainly due to the lack of access to basic services, resources, techno...
This research is about how development practice is produced by development bureaucracies. In 2001, t...
Mexico’s economy began a process of economic liberalization in the 1980s that continued through the ...
The debate over the orientation of modernization and development is one that has occupied scholars f...
Poverty levels have been diminishing in Mexico since the late 90's, although several regions still s...