Criminal Justice in Eighteenth-Century Mexico

Criminal Justice in Eighteenth-Century Mexico
Title Criminal Justice in Eighteenth-Century Mexico PDF eBook
Author Colin M. MacLachlan
Publisher University of California Press
Pages 150
Release 2021-01-08
Genre History
ISBN 0520315812

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This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1974.

Criminal Justice in Eighteenth Century Mexico

Criminal Justice in Eighteenth Century Mexico
Title Criminal Justice in Eighteenth Century Mexico PDF eBook
Author Colin M. MacLachlan
Publisher Univ of California Press
Pages 156
Release 1974-01-01
Genre Law
ISBN 9780520024168

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Criminal Justice in Eighteenth Century Mexico

Criminal Justice in Eighteenth Century Mexico
Title Criminal Justice in Eighteenth Century Mexico PDF eBook
Author Colin M. Maclachlan
Publisher
Pages 151
Release 1974
Genre NON-CLASSIFIABLE.
ISBN 9780520315822

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Hacienda and Market in Eighteenth-century Mexico

Hacienda and Market in Eighteenth-century Mexico
Title Hacienda and Market in Eighteenth-century Mexico PDF eBook
Author Eric Van Young
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Pages 460
Release 2006
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 9780742553569

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This classic history of the Mexican hacienda from the colonial period through the nineteenth century has been reissued in a silver anniversary edition complete with a substantive new introduction and foreword. Eric Van Young explores 150 years of Mexico's economic and rural development, a period when one of history's great empires was trying to extract more resources from its most important colony, and when an arguably capitalist economy was both expanding and taking deeper root. The author explains the development of a regional agrarian system, centered on the landed estates of late colonial Mexico, the central economic and social institution of an overwhelmingly rural society.

Forced Migration in the Spanish Pacific World

Forced Migration in the Spanish Pacific World
Title Forced Migration in the Spanish Pacific World PDF eBook
Author Eva Maria Mehl
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 325
Release 2016-07-11
Genre History
ISBN 1107136792

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An exploration of the deportation of Mexican military recruits and vagrants to the Philippines between 1765 and 1811.

Gamboa's World

Gamboa's World
Title Gamboa's World PDF eBook
Author Christopher Albi
Publisher University of New Mexico Press
Pages 257
Release 2021-11-15
Genre History
ISBN 0826362966

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Gamboa’s World examines the changing legal landscape of eighteenth-century Mexico through the lens of the jurist Francisco Xavier de Gamboa (1717–1794). Gamboa was both a representative of legal professionals in the Spanish world and a central protagonist in major legal controversies in Mexico. Of Basque descent, Gamboa rose from an impoverished childhood in Guadalajara to the top of the judicial hierarchy in New Spain. He practiced law in Mexico City in the 1740s, represented Mexican merchants in Madrid in the late 1750s, published an authoritative commentary on mining law in 1761, and served for three decades as an Audiencia magistrate. In 1788 he became the first locally born regent, or chief justice, of the High Court of New Spain. In this important work, Christopher Albi shows how Gamboa’s forgotten career path illuminates the evolution of colonial legal culture and how his arguments about law and justice remain relevant today as Mexico debates how to strengthen the rule of law.

Criminal and Citizen in Modern Mexico

Criminal and Citizen in Modern Mexico
Title Criminal and Citizen in Modern Mexico PDF eBook
Author Robert Buffington
Publisher U of Nebraska Press
Pages 254
Release 2000-01-01
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9780803261594

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Criminal and Citizen in Modern Mexico explores elite notions of crime and criminality from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century. In Mexico these notions represented contested areas of the social terrain, places where generalized ideas about criminality transcended the individual criminal act to intersect with larger issues of class, race, gender, and sexuality. It was at this intersection that modern Mexican society bared its soul. Attitudes toward race amalgamation and indios, lower-class lifestyles and läperos, women and sexual deviance, all influenced perceptions of criminality and ultimately determined the fundamental issue of citizenship: who belonged and who did not. The liberal discourse of toleration and human rights, the positivist discourse of order and progress, the revolutionary discourse of social justice and integration sought in turn to disguise the exclusions of modern Mexican society behind a veil of criminality?to proscribe as criminal those activities that criminologists, penologists, and anthropologists clearly linked to marginalized social groups. This book attempts to lift that veil and to gaze, like Josä Guadalupe Posada, at the grinning calavera that it shields.