The significance of racial self-identification formation and how it influences voting or political affiliation of Latinos has been neglected in sociological analyses of whiteness and white identity formation. Whiteness studies can benefit from an analysis of how Latinos residing in the United States ...
‘native/non-native’ debate. Issues, such as the political Mexican-American relationship, physical appearance, pejorative terminology, and accent, emerged from the data as factors determining the participants’ personal and professional identities. The participants’ discourses of attachment and detachment...
Political Affiliation: Whig Party Role In: American Civil War Battle of Cerro Gordo Battle of Chapultepec Battle of Chippewa Battle of Contreras Battle of Lundy’s Lane First Battle of Bull Run Mexican-American War Trail of Tears (Show more) ...
Political Affiliation: Institutional Revolutionary Party Show More Lázaro Cárdenas(born May 21, 1895, Jiquilpan, Mexico—died October 19, 1970, Mexico City) was thepresidentof Mexico (1934–40), noted for his efforts to carry out the social and economic aims of theMexican Revolution. He distrib...
POLITICAL affiliationPOLITICAL changeREALIGNMENT (Political science)MEXICAN politics & governmentVOTINGWhy do politicians in Mexico switch parties? The party-switching literature suggests that politicians generally switch parties for office-seeking or policy-seeking motives, whereas literature on the Mexican ...
This article also suggests that the ban on consecutive re‐election encourages party switching; after every term in office, Mexican politicians have the opportunity to re‐evaluate their party affiliation to continue their careers.Yann P. Kerevel...
The chapter focuses on identifying and characterizing the opinions that federal legislators have on political parity. To do so, we employ the database of the Latin American Elites Project of the University of Salamanca (PELA-USAL), using data from 2009 to 2020. The main differences in ...
Political Affiliation: Mexican Liberal Party See all related content Ricardo Flores Magón (born September 16, 1873, San Antonio Eloxochitlán, Oaxaca, Mexico—died November 21, 1922, Leavenworth, Kansas, U.S.) was a Mexican reformer and anarchist who was an intellectual precursor of the Mexican...