Considering the Alternatives: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Agriculture, Water, and Migration in Mexico under State Developmentalism and Neoliberalism
Mikael Wolfe is an Assistant Professor of History at Stanford University. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago and was a visiting fellow at the Kellogg Institute for International Affairs at the University of Notre Dame and the Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies at the University of California-San Diego, and the Mellon Visiting Assistant Professor of Environmental History at the University of California, Los Angeles. He has published a working paper and articles on the technopolitical and socioecological history of water management in Mexico in the Kellogg Institute Working Paper Series, Buenaval and the Journal of the Southwest, respectively, and his first book-length manuscript “Watering the Revolution: The Technopolitical Success and Socioecological Failure of Mexico’s Agrarian Reform in La Laguna” is under review with Duke University Press.
Mikael Wolfe; Considering the Alternatives: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Agriculture, Water, and Migration in Mexico under State Developmentalism and Neoliberalism. Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos 1 February 2013; 29 (1): 1–2. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/msem.2013.29.1.1
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