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International Politics and the Environment

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Environment and Urbanization
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El Mezquital: a community’s struggle for development

Andrés Cabanas Díaz

Emma Grant

grante{at}sbu.ac.uk

Paula Irene del Cid Vargas

Verónica Sajbin Velásquez

This paper describes the history of the community in El Mezquital, from the land invasion in the mid 1980s, through its consolidation and growth, until the present, drawing principally on interviews with the inhabitants and staff from supporting agencies. It analyzes the development of the different, and sometimes conflicting, community organizations and compares their different mandates and objectives. It shows important processes of community empowerment, the changing role of women and community self-help initiatives. It also describes how, in much of the settlement, basic infrastructure and services were in place and of good quality. However, it also highlights the lack of employment opportunities, how many people still live in overcrowded conditions, and the problems of violence, drug addiction and street children. It also highlights the inadequacies on the part of government agencies - including their incapacity to respond to the needs of the community, their under-estimation of community capacity and the attempts at political manipulation.

Environment and Urbanization, Vol. 12, No. 1, 87-106 (2000)
DOI: 10.1177/095624780001200107


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