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  1. Globalization of Science and Repression of Scientists in Mexico.Richard Worthington & Mauricio Schoijet - 1993 - Science, Technology and Human Values 18 (2):209-230.
    In this article, recent changes in the Mexican research system are examined. The restructuring of the global political economy and a severe crisis of legitimacy in the Mexican political system have generated a turn toward neoliberalism by the ruling party in a bid to attract foreign investment. A key component of neoliberal science policy is the Sistema Nacional de Investigadores, a system of salary increments for selected researchers instituted during the 1980s. Examination of SNI's decisions reveals numerous discriminatory and self-serving (...)
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  • Theorizing business power in the semiperiphery: Mexico 1970-2000. [REVIEW]Leslie C. Gates - 2009 - Theory and Society 38 (1):57-95.
    This study explains why the power of neoliberal business over the Mexican state increased during the last three decades of the twentieth century. It identifies three sources of increased neoliberal business power that occurred in conjunction with neoliberal reforms: (1) active mobilization by neoliberal business, (2) increased access to the state by neoliberal business, and (3) increased economic power of neoliberal business. It thereby contributes additional evidence that counters the view of Mexico’s state neoliberalizers as acting autonomously from business. It (...)
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