Description
Postrevolutionary Mexican experts aimed to transform their country into a modern secular state with a dynamic economy, and central to this endeavor was learning how to ""manage"" racial difference and social welfare. The same concern animated U.S. New Deal policies toward Native Americans. The scientists' border-crossing conceptions of modernity, race, evolution, and pluralism were not simple one-way impositions or appropriations, and they had significant effects. In the United States, the resulting approaches to the management of Native American affairs later shaped policies toward immigrants and black Americans, in Mexico, officials rejected policy prescriptions they associated with U.S. intellectual imperialism and racial segregation.
About the Author
Karin Rosemblatt is associate professor of history at the University of Maryland and the author of Gendered Compromises: Political Cultures and the State in Chile, 1920-1950.
Book Information
ISBN 9781469636405
Author Karin Alejandra Rosemblatt
Format Paperback
Page Count 272
Imprint The University of North Carolina Press
Publisher The University of North Carolina Press