Creating a New Guatemala

Creating a New Guatemala
Title Creating a New Guatemala PDF eBook
Author Tiffany Kwader Harbour
Publisher
Pages 70
Release 2008
Genre Delegated legislation
ISBN

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In 1952, Guatemala enacted the Agrarian Reform Law Decree 900. The Decree became an instrument for national development through land redistribution and the development of agrarian rights. Although the law was only upheld for eighteen months, the Decree influenced land and labor legislation through today. Struggles for agrarian rights continued throughout the military dictatorship and civil war which plagued Guatemala until the signing of the 1996 Peace Accords. Ideals for land reform originating in the 1952 law continue to have a pervasive influence on the Guatemalan land reform movement. This study is further contextualized and framed with quotes and analysis from José Luis Paredes Moreira’s investigation of Decree 900 and its impact in Guatemala. The second section of this project includes an original translation of Decree 900.

Dependency And Intervention

Dependency And Intervention
Title Dependency And Intervention PDF eBook
Author Jose M. Aybar De Soto
Publisher Westview Press
Pages 404
Release 1978-12-05
Genre History
ISBN

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Garrison Guatemala

Garrison Guatemala
Title Garrison Guatemala PDF eBook
Author George Black
Publisher
Pages 232
Release 1984
Genre History
ISBN

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Silence on the Mountain

Silence on the Mountain
Title Silence on the Mountain PDF eBook
Author Daniel Wilkinson
Publisher Duke University Press
Pages 396
Release 2004
Genre History
ISBN 9780822333685

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Written by a young human rights worker, "Silence on the Mountain" is a virtuoso work of reporting and a masterfully plotted narrative tracing the history of Guatemala's 36-year internal war, a conflict that claimed the lives of more than 200,000 people.

Agrotropolis

Agrotropolis
Title Agrotropolis PDF eBook
Author J.T. Way
Publisher University of California Press
Pages 323
Release 2021-01-26
Genre History
ISBN 0520291859

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In Agrotropolis, historian J. T. Way traces the developments of Guatemalan urbanization and youth culture since 1983. In case studies that bring together political economy, popular music, and everyday life, Way explores the rise of urban space in towns seen as quintessentially "rural" and showcases grassroots cultural assertiveness. In a post-revolutionary era, young people coming of age on the globally inflected city street used popular culture as one means of creating a new national imaginary that rejects Guatemala's racially coded system of castes. Drawing on local sources, deep ethnographies, and the digital archive, Agrotropolis places working-class Maya and mestizo hometowns and creativity at the center of planetary urban history.

Guatemala-U.S. Migration

Guatemala-U.S. Migration
Title Guatemala-U.S. Migration PDF eBook
Author Susanne Jonas
Publisher University of Texas Press
Pages 311
Release 2015-01-05
Genre Social Science
ISBN 029276314X

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Guatemala-U.S. Migration: Transforming Regions is a pioneering, comprehensive, and multifaceted study of Guatemalan migration to the United States from the late 1970s to the present. It analyzes this migration in a regional context including Guatemala, Mexico, and the United States. This book illuminates the perilous passage through Mexico for Guatemalan migrants, as well as their settlement in various U.S. venues. Moreover, it builds on existing theoretical frameworks and breaks new ground by analyzing the construction and transformations of this migration region and transregional dimensions of migration. Seamlessly blending multiple sociological perspectives, this book addresses the experiences of both Maya and ladino Guatemalan migrants, incorporating gendered as well as ethnic and class dimensions of migration. It spans the most violent years of the civil war and the postwar years in Guatemala, hence including both refugees and labor migrants. The demographic chapter delineates five phases of Guatemalan migration to the United States since the late 1970s, with immigrants experiencing both inclusion and exclusion very dramatically during the most recent phase, in the early twenty-first century. This book also features an innovative study of Guatemalan migrant rights organizing in the United States and transregionally in Guatemala/Central America and Mexico. The two contrasting in-depth case studies of Guatemalan communities in Houston and San Francisco elaborate in vibrant detail the everyday experiences and evolving stories of the immigrants’ lives.

Memory of Silence

Memory of Silence
Title Memory of Silence PDF eBook
Author D. Rothenberg
Publisher Springer
Pages 310
Release 2016-04-30
Genre History
ISBN 1137011149

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This edited, one-volume version presents the first ever English translation of the report of The Guatemalan Commission for Historical Clarification (CEH), a truth commission that exposed the details of 'la violenca,' during which hundreds of massacres were committed in a scorched-earth campaign that displaced approximately one million people.