Sterling Evans, History

Dr. Sterling Evans came to Brandon University in 2005 from Humboldt State University in California, where he was an Associate Professor of History. Dr. Evans is presently an Associate Professor in the History Department at Brandon University.

Canada Research Chairs at Brandon University have a smaller teaching load than other faculty members, so that they may devote more time to their research. While Dr. Evans is currently (Fall 2007) on sabbatical, he has taught several courses over the past two years in Brandon University's Department of History, including:

54:284 The United States to 1877

54:285 The United States Since 1877

54:291 Modern Latin America

54:361 History of Mexico

54/88:459 Seminar in Agricultural History

As the Canada Research Chair in History, Dr. Evans is currently carrying out studies on agricultural dependencies and markets and environmental change in the transnational Great Plains and Mexico, and the history of conservation and other environmental issues elsewhere in Latin America.

Dr. Evans's Bound in Twine: The History and Ecology of the Henequen-Wheat Complex for Yucatan and the American and Canadian Plains, 1880-1950, was published this year by College Station: Texas A&M University Press.

For more information about Dr. Evans please visit: http://www.brandonu.ca/History/Evans.htm

Sterling Evans

Department of History, Brandon University; Brandon, MB R7A 6A9

Education

Ph.D. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, Aug. 1997, History. Comprehensive Examination
Fields: Modern Latin America, Colonial Latin America, the American West, Environmental History.

M.A. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, Dec. 1992, Latin American Studies.

Other Graduate Work:
UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING, 1984, course work in Mexican and Andean studies.

B.A. ANDERSON UNIVERSITY (IN), May 1981. Graduated with Honors in Spanish.
Majors: Spanish, History, Education. Minor: French.

Other Undergraduate Work:
MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE (VT), 1979, summer Spanish language program;
UNIVERSITY OF GRANADA (SPAIN), 1980, semester study abroad program

Professional Experience

2005 - : Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair in History; Brandon University; Brandon, MB (Canada)

1998-2005: Assis./Assoc. Professor of History; Humboldt State University, Arcata, CA

1997-1998: Sessional Assistant Professor of History; University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB

1992-1996: Assistant Instructor; University of Kansas; Lawrence, KS

1993-1994: Teaching Assistant; University of Kansas; Lawrence, KS

Publications

books:

Bound in Twine: The History and Ecology of the Henequen-Wheat Complex for Yucatan and the American and Canadian Plains, 1880-1950, College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2007 (306 pages).

The Green Republic: A Conservation History of Costa Rica, Austin: University of Texas Press, 1999 (317 pages).

edited anthologies:

The Borderlands of the American and Canadian Wests: Essays on Regional History of the 49th Parallel, Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2006 (369 pages).

American Indians in American History, 1870-2001: A Companion Reader , Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers, 2002 (249 pages).

articles:

"History and Environment in Mexico: An Historiographical Introduction," guest introduction to new edition of Charles H. Harris III, The Sánchez-Navarros: A

Socio-economic Study of a Coahuilan Latifundio, 1856-1853, (forthcoming).

"Green Historiography: The State of Latin American Conservation History," in Reinaldo Funes, ed., Naturaleza en la historia: tema de historia ambiental Latinoamericana y caribeña, (forthcoming).

"The Anguish of Angosturas: The Socio-Environmental Consequences of Dam-Building in Sonora," Signos Históricos (Mexico), forthcoming, sum./fall 2007.

"Dependent Harvests: Grain Production on the American and Canadian Plains and the Double Dependency with Mexico," Agricultural History 80:1 (Winter 2006), 35-63.

"Entwined in Conflict: The South Dakota State Prison Twine Plant and the Controversy of 1919-1921," South Dakota History 35:2 (Summer 2005), 95-124.

"From Kanasín to Kansas: Mexican Sisal, Binder Twine, and the State Penitentiary Twine Factory, 1890-1940," Kansas History-Journal of the Central Plains 24:4 (Winter 2001-2002), 276-299.

"Prison-Made Binder Twine: North Dakota's Connection with Mexico in the Early Twentieth Century," North Dakota History-Journal of the Northern Plains 68:1 (2001), 20-36.

"Yaquis vs. Yanquis: An Environmental and Historical Comparison of Coping with Aridity in Southern Sonora," Journal of the Southwest 40:3 (Autumn 1998), 363-96.

"Eastward Ho! The Mexican Freighting and Commerce Experience Along the Santa Fe Trail," Kansas History-Journal of the Central Plains 19:4 (Winter 1997), 242-61.

"At Union's Brink: Ideals and Problems in Restoring the United Provinces of Central America, 1920-1922," Latin American Research Review 32:1 (1997), 69-87.

encyclopedia entries:

"Northern Plains," "Wheat," "The United States and Canada," and "Badlands," in Encyclopedia of American Environmental History, New York: Clio, forthcoming.

"Central America," "Mexico," and "Fiber Crops" in Encyclopedia of World Environmental History, New York: Routledge, 2004.

book reviews:

of David G. McCrady: Living with Strangers: The Nineteenth-Century Sioux and the Canadian-American Borderlands (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2006), in American Historical Review (Apr. 2007), 487.

of Gregory E. Smoak, Ghost Dances and Identity: Prophetic Religion and American Indian Ethnogenesis in the Nineteenth Century (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2006), in Idaho Yesteryears (forthcoming).

of Craig Miner, Next Year Country: Dust to Dust in Western Kansas, 1890-1940 (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2006), in Agricultural History (forthcoming).

of John Soluri, Banana Cultures: Agriculture, Consumption, and Environmental Change in Honduras and the United States (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2005), in Environmental History11:4 (Oct. 2006), 853-854.

of Virgil Dean, ed. John Brown to Bob Dole: Movers and Shakers in Kansas History (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas2006), in South Dakota History 36:4 (Winter 2006), 410-411.

of John K. Bukowczyk, et al, Permeable Border: The Great Lakes Basin as Transnational Region, 1650-1990 (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2005), in Journal of American EthnicHistory, 26:1 (Fall 2006), 97-98.

of E. N. Anderson, Political Ecology in a Yucatec Maya Community (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2005), in Agricultural History (forthcoming).

of M. Bonnell and L. A. Bruijnzeel, eds. Forests, Water, and People in the Humid Tropics: Past, Present, and Future Hydrological Research for Integrated Management (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005), in Environmental History 11:2 (Apr. 2006), 365-366.

of Carol Higham and Robert Thacker, eds. One West, Two Myths: A Comparative Reader (University of Calgary Press, 2004) in Histoire Sociale / Social History 38:76 (Nov. 2005), 519-521.

of Joshua Blu Buhs, The Fire Ant Wars: Nature, Science, and Public Policy in Twentieth-Century America (University of Chicago Press, 2004) in Environmental Conservation (Summer 2005 ).

of Simon Evans, The Bar U and Canadian Ranching History (University of Calgary Press, 2003) in Agricultural History 50:4 (Fall 2006), 482-484.

of Ana Guadalupe Valenzuela-Zapata and Gary Paul Nabhan, Tequila: A Natural and Cultural History (University of Arizona Press, 2004) in Agricultural History 78:4 (Fall 2004).

of Evan R. Ward, Border Oasis: Water and the Political Ecology of the Colorado River Delta, 1940-1975 (University of Arizona Press) in Western Historical Quarterly 35:1 (Spring 2004), 78-79.

of Norma Smith, Jeannette Rankin: America's Conscience (Montana Historical Society Press, 2002) in Montana The Magazine of Western History 53:1 (Spring 2003), 87.

of Shawn William Miller, Fruitless Trees: Portuguese Conservation and Brazil's Colonial Timber (Stanford University Press, 2000) in Canadian Journal of History 37 (Dec. 2002), 594-596.

double review of Robin L. Anderson, Colonization as Exploitation in the Amazon Rainforest, 1758-1911 (University Press of Florida, 1999) and M.D. Faminow, Cattle Deforestation and Development in the Amazon: An Economic, Agronomic and Environmental Perspective (CABI, 1998) in Environmental History 6:2 (Apr. 2001), 332-334.

of William Balée, ed. Advances in Historical Ecology (Columbia University Press, 1998) in Environmental History 4:2 (Apr. 1999), 287-288.

of Alan Weisman, Gaviotas: A Village to Reinvent the World (Chelsea Green Publishing, 1998) in Hope Magazine (Nov./Dec. 1998), 70.

Research in Progress

Damming Sonora: Water, Agriculture, and Environmental Change in Northwest Mexico. This is a book-length study that highlights the development of a series of hydro projects that have forever changed the natural and agricultural landscapes of Sonora, and that have had profound social implications on the people of the state. The research is completed on this project, and have presented papers out of this research at conferences. I am on a writing sabbatical semester in fall of 2007 to complete the manuscript for the University of Arizona Press for its series on Borderlands Environmental History.

B adlands!: The History and Conservation of the Badlands of the North American West. From Native Americans to Theodore Roosevelt to efforts to establish preserved "park" areas, the badlands of North America (in northern Mexico, the western United States, and Canada) have had a storied history. This book-length project will seek to address this lesser known dimension of North American environmental and conservation history by tracing differing views and understandings of what badlands are, their differing perceptions and land uses by Native and newcomer peoples, and how various state, provincial, and national governments have come to preserve them. Case studies from the Sierra del Pinacate (Sonora), the Malpais (New Mexico), Devil's Playground (southern California), Hell's Half Acre (Wyoming), Toadstool Park (Nebraska), Craters of the Moon National Monument (Idaho), Badlands National Park (South Dakota), Theodore Roosevelt National Park (North Dakota), and the Hoodoos, Valley of the Moon, and Milk River Badlands (all in Alberta) will be examined.

North American Environmental History: A Continental Approach to Readings on Canada, the United States, and Mexico. I am compiling and editing a collection of essays by scholars in the field of environmental history that will be published in an anthology format. The collection will center on varying transnational aspects of Canadian, U.S., and Mexican history that relate to environmental change in the region over time. Emphasis will be placed on transnational and borderlands interactions that have caused environmental change. Likewise, the volume will include thematic articles that consider such topics as implications on Native North America, conservation, agriculture, trade and economics, international relations, and urban change. It will include essays written by scholars from each of the three countries.

Languages

I am fluent in Spanish, and can read, write, and communicate in French and Portuguese.

For guest introduction to new edition of Charles H. Harris III, The Sánchez-Navarros: A Socio-economic Study of a Coahuilan Latifundio, 1846-1853

History and Environment in Mexico:

An Historiographical Introduction to the New Edition

The first line of Charles Harris's book The Sánchez-Navarros: A Socio-economic Study of a Coahuilan Latifundio, 1846-1853 states it all: "The land problem has been of continuing importance in the history of Mexico."[1] The focus on land that is inherent in the history of the Sánchez-Navarro estate in the northern Mexican state of Coahuila situates Harris's study squarely in a kind of proto-environmental history. Although it was written in the early 1960s before the development of that subdiscipline, the underlying theme of The Sánchez-Navarros is the interrelationship between humans and the natural world, and in this case, between the owners and workers of a vast latifundio estate and the semi-arid, desert terrain in which they lived. Those people included the wealthy hacienda owners, their many herders and fieldhands, and the nomadic indigenous peoples of Coahuila (primarily Comanches and Lipan Apaches) who competed for resources with the Mexicans and often raided their livestock herds as a way of trying to survive in an ever more Hispanicized Mexican North.

All are in Harris' study here. Although the book perhaps could be classified more as a social history than an environmental history, the book is useful for the environmental history of northern Mexico. Noting the role of nature on this area, Harris explained that

Much of Coahuila was semi-arid, with scanty and irregular rainfall. Such geography was not conducive to the growth of small individual holdings, which were in danger of bankruptcy during prolonged periods of drought when crops failed and livestock died by the hundreds. . . . It would seem that the latifundio, despite its many drawbacks, was the form of land tenure best suited to the conditions obtaining Coahuila at midcentury.[2]

Cyclical droughts were especially hard on herders, affecting both large-scale and small campesino operations. Harris discovered that the Coahuilan drought of 1851 was particularly harsh and resulted in massive losses of livestock and crops, misery for local farmers and villagers, and trickle-down economic disadvantages in the cities that serviced the area.[3]

Historiographically, there is a rich tradition of hacienda history that is usually placed in the category of Mexican rural history.[4] Eric Van Young, in an important review article, defined rural history "to mean the economic and social relationships of settled farming people living outside cities, specifically with regard to production of goods from the land."[5] Harris's study complies well with that definition and was one of the first such works in the field, especially for northern Mexico, drawing on the seminal work of French historian François Chevalier's La formation des grands domains au Mexique (1952).[6] There is also an important body of literature on the development of the livestock industry in northern Mexico, much of which was published around the time of Harris's The Sánchez-Navarros or later in the 1960s and 1970s.[7] And finally, some historians have concentrated more on the social and labor dimensions of the haciendas, especially on the encomienda of workers on which the estates depended.[8]

As rural history, then, The Sánchez-Navarros also fits well into the recently reinvigorated and evolving genre of agricultural history, one that is paying attention to the many kinds of historical analyses regarding farming and herding or ranching in all parts of the world.[9] Formerly associated primarily with "the technology and economics of production,"[10] agricultural history in North America now seeks to embrace the social, economic, labor, and environmental dimensions of the land-people relationship. In Europe, the term "agrarian history" is more popular for this type of rural or agricultural analysis, especially for a broader understanding of rural social structure.[11] But no matter what the academic label, in Mexico it was, and continues to be, all about the "land problem."

The Sánchez-Navarros was originally Harris's M.A. thesis from the University of Texas that won the nationally contested William P. Lyons Master's Essay Award in 1963, and that included publication by Loyola University Press. How Harris came to choose his thesis topic stems from his upbringing in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands. Charles Houston Harris III was born in Chihuahua, Chihuahua, and raised between there and Fort Worth, Texas, giving him an innate sense of history and place. "I became interested in Mexican history during the summers I spent in Chihuahua while I was growing up," he related, "listening to the old guys lie about how they'd ridden with Pancho Villa." He went to the University of Texas for his undergraduate degree and then began to prepare for a career in law. But, as he acknowledged, "during a brief stint in law school," which bored him, he recognized his true interest in Mexican history. "By getting a PhD in history I could spend my career reading about and doing research in Mexico, so I made the switch—one of the best things I've ever done." Specifically for the Coahuilan latifundio topic, Harris reminisced, "I got involved in writing about the Sánchez-Navarros because my M.A. advisor, Tom McGann, informed me that the Latin American Collection [at the University of Texas Library] had most of that family's archive and because of my background he thought I should use it."[12]

After completing his Master's, Harris stayed on at the University of Texas for his doctoral degree (1968). He also stayed with the topic of the Sánchez-Navarro family for his dissertation, "A Mexican Latifundio: The Economic Empire of the Sánchez-Navarro Family, 1765-1821," mining the family archive more completely and taking the story back to the late colonial era and up to the time of Mexican independence. Later he expanded the work even further, extending it chronologically another fifty some years to 1867 and had it published as A Mexican Family Empire: The Latifundio of the Sánchez-Navarros, 1765-1867 (1975)—a work that complemented the rapidly growing body of hacienda historiography by that time (that also included a number of works on Jesuit haciendas).[13] By then his teaching career was well underway. He first taught as a Mexicanist historian at California State University, Long Beach (1966-1969), and later at New Mexico State University from 1969 until his retirement in 1996. While in Las Cruces, he and his NMSU historian colleague and friend Louis R. "Ray" Sadler co-wrote three other books: The Border and the Revolution (1988), The Archaeologist Was a Spy: Sylvanus G. Morley and the Office of Naval Intelligence (2003), and The Texas Rangers and the Mexican Revolution: The Bloodiest Decade, 1910-1920 (2004).[14] They are currently at work on a fourth joint effort on the topic of --------------------------------.

The value of a new edition of The Sánchez-Navarros is in its relevance for the studies of Mexican haciendas and for an emerging environmental historiography of Mexico. University of Arizona historian William Beezley, who has often assigned the book in his classes on Modern Mexico, points to how standard studies of Mexican latifundia tended to make "all haciendas economically inefficient and socially repressive institutions." But, he continued, "Harris said that the Mexican haciendas, especially this one, in the North were in fact a reasonable institutional response to the environment (including the nomadic peoples in the region)."[15] Thus, the study of the Sánchez-Navarro hacienda can add understanding to the environmental history of Mexico to show how humans and nature have interacted over time to forge what is today a vibrant and diverse country. But Mexico also has had severe environmental dilemmas, and its history helps explain the roots of those dilemmas and why they are so difficult to solve.[16]

At 1.9 million square kilometers, Mexico is the second-largest country in Latin America (after Brazil). The mountains of the Sierra Madre dominate Mexico's physical landscape; the Sierra Madre Oriental runs north to south on Mexico's eastern side, and the Sierra Madre Occidental (with extensive pine forests at certain elevations, especially in Chihuahua) form a spine from north to south on the western side. Between the ranges are plateaus, deserts, and valleys with dry, harsh climates—meaning that only ten percent of the country is useful for agriculture, and much of that requires intense irrigation.[17] In Mexico's southern region are more mountains, some of which are active volcanoes, and dense tropical forests. Like appendages sticking out from both ends, Mexico's two peninsulas have unique characteristics. The Yucatan Peninsula in the Southeast is flat and dominated by low scrub deciduous forest, and Baja California in the Northwest is characterized by the Sonoran Desert and the San Pedro Mártir Mountains. One of Mexico's most unique, and most threatened, ecosystems is the Pacific tropical dry forest (bosque seco tropical) that originally extended along much of the west coast from Chiapas to southern Sonora. Unique in that unlike the well-known tropical rainforests of southern Mexico, the bosque seco is a deciduous forest that turns brown in the seasonally dry winter months, which reminded European newcomers of the type of landscapes they were accustomed to in Spain for livestock production and agriculture, and causing its large-scale conversion to an agro-landscape.[18] The deserts, mountains, tropical forests (humid and dry), and lack of any major, navigable rivers have been blamed as geographic barriers to transportation, communication, and economic development over time. However, with such diversity of regions, climates, and ecosystems the country is often considered to be "many Mexicos."[19]

Equally diverse is Mexico's rich indigenous heritage. How pre-Columbian populations thrived in such diverse environmental conditions merits attention. In the northern deserts some groups, such as the Chichamecs, were nomadic, making optimum resource use of hunting and gathering. Others, such as the Yaquis in southern Sonora, practiced floodgate irrigation in the rich Yaqui River delta. In southern Mexico, great cities flourished in the Mayan and Nahua (Aztec) empires—cities that required considerable quantities of food and natural resources. To meet those needs, Indians created an intercropping system planting maize in rows, nitrogen-fixing beans besides the corn to restore nutrients and to climb up the corn stalks, and a variety of squashes between the rows. The squash leaves provided a protective cover against the sun for the beans, and acted as a natural control against insects.

In the Valley of Mexico, where the invading Nahua established the great city of Tenochtitlán, the Mexica and other local indigenous groups had developed a unique form of agriculture called chinampas. This highly productive farming method used beds of mud and decayed plant material in the region's lake shallows for the planting of a vast array of grains and vegetables that provided a nutritious and diverse diet. The Indians harvested the chinampas several times a year, which supported Tenochtitlán—a city of an estimated 235,000 people by the mid-fifteenth century.[20] Further, as one historian has noted, "the chinampas aided soil and forest conservation by reducing pressures to burn steep wooded hillsides for farming."[21] This efficient farming practice continues today near Xochimilco, but much of the chinampas land has been destroyed by urban sprawl in the greater Mexico City area.

Further south, the Mayans of Yucatán and Chiapas used milpa (corn plot) farming—fields made by clearing and burning lands in the tropical forests. With efficient intercropping, they too were able to sustain large populations until the tenth century CE, when their advanced civilizations suffered a demographic collapse. The reasons for the collapse are not entirely known today, but most scholars agree that it was due to the Mayans exceeding their carrying capacity, some cataclysmic event (that could have been weather-related causing famines), internal political divisiveness, or external military aggression, or a combination of all the above. But despite their environmental limitations, the Maya, like all indigenous societies, maintained a spiritual relationship with nature. For them the ceiba tree was sacred—it held up the four corners of the world; also the souls of their dead went under it, and therefore it was not to be felled. Their respect and fear of the forest helped to preserve it.[22] Today, ceiba trees are still considered sacred by the Maya, but the silky hairs that surround their seedpods, a substance known as kapok, are harvested as an important fiber crop used as filler in mattresses and life preservers.

Into this world came Spanish colonizers in the sixteenth century. Hernán Cortés and his crew invaded Mexico in 1519 with riches and domination in mind. With the help of some indigenous groups who had suffered under Nahua imperialism, and superior military technology using firearms and horses, by 1521 Cortés was triumphant in claiming Mexico for Spain. The Spanish monarchs then established the viceroyalty of New Spain and sent other conquistadors, explorers, and priests to secure the colony. Diseases the Europeans brought with them, against which the Indians had no immunities, facilitated the colonization project. Epidemics of influenza, measles, typhus, and especially smallpox caused such high mortality that by the mid-seventeenth century the indigenous population of the region was between 5 and 10 percent of what it had been in 1500. Thus, in great part the conquest was a biological one.[23]

Other environmental changes occurred when the colonizers introduced crops and livestock that produced food that they were used to in Spain. Wheat, malt barley, and wine grapes became new standard staple crops. Mediterranean fruits and olives replaced much of the local produce. A variety of weeds that traveled with the Europeans competed with, and often overtook, native plant habitats.[24] Cattle and sheep, however, caused the greatest ecological transformations, especially given that there were no native livestock or hoofed animals in pre-Columbian Mexico. What has been called "ungulate irruptions" occurred when livestock exceeded the carrying capacity of rangelands and caused plant communities to crash until a plant-animal accommodation plateau was reached. This was especially apparent with sheep in the Mezquital Valley northeast of Mexico City by the end of the sixteenth century when intensive grazing caused severe erosion and deterioration of the valley's environment.[25] Crosby referred to these introduced European pathogens, weeds, agricultural crops, and domesticated animals as a "portmanteau biota" that traveled from the Old World to the New.[26]

The Spaniards also introduced plantation agriculture in the areas that were conducive to growing sugarcane and, with even greater environmental implications, began large-scale mining ventures.[27] Gold and silver were in high demand in Europe, and Mexico's vast underground reserves were soon discovered and exploited using the colonial encomienda labor system. Similar to slavery, the process exploited indigenous people and helped transform landscapes. Mining, with its demand for timber to support shafts and food to feed miners, was especially damaging.[28] Finally, exporting sugar, minerals, and other raw materials during the colonial era set Mexico on a dependency pathway that continued long after independence.

When Mexicans won their independence in 1810 their national map included all of New Spain—from Guatemala to the Oregon-California border (the forty-second parallel). Granted, there were few Spanish settlements in the vast area that is now the U.S. Southwest, only missions and scattered settlements along the California coast and in northern New Mexico. However, Mexico lost that land, nearly half its territory, in the Mexican-American War (or the War of American Aggression, as it is called in Mexico) by 1848—just before gold was discovered in California. The lost land and resources became a boon for an expanding United States. This was the time period of Harris' study here in which the impact of the Mexican-American War on the Sánchez-Navarro family's ranching enterprise in Coahuila is explained.[29]

During the formative years of its new nationhood, Mexico was ruled by General Antonio López de Santa Anna (1833-1855), under whose command the country lost so much land and suffered from stagnant economic growth. A revolt against his dictatorship in 1858 promulgated a new government, that of Benito Juárez who believed in liberal economic policy. Juárez's liberal policies advocated modernization, material progress, and the increased development of natural resources. Thus Mexico began to disburse funds for railroads, mines, and other national projects, which often were at the expense of indigenous communities and hastened the pace of altering natural environments. Forests were cleared, mountainsides were often overgrazed and were studded with mining operations and tailings piles, and vast open areas were converted to intensive agriculture.

This pattern only accelerated during the dictatorship of Porfirio Díaz (1876-1911), whose advisors were schooled in European positivism—a belief that economic development follows private property, modernized agriculture, expanded transportation and communications, and an educational system bent on science and engineering. Thus Díaz's policies converted a great deal of native land to plantation agriculture to sell cotton, sugar, henequen (a fiber crop grown in Yucatán and used to make rope and twine), and later vegetables on the international market. His government emphasized mining, especially that of copper, which was high in demand due to a growing world market for electrical conduit. It also expanded Mexico's railway system, nearly quadrupling its number of miles, to transport the agricultural and mineral commodities to ports.[30]

Despite the social and ecological changes (e.g. eroded hillsides, clear-cut forests, polluted streams and rivers from mining operations, and dammed valleys) that these developments caused, the expected economic benefits never materialized for the majority of Mexicans. The projects were dependent on foreign investments, 80 percent from the United States, meaning that profits went to large land and business owners. By 1910 half of Mexico's land was controlled by three hundred families. Likewise, the railroads made it easier for people to relocate, as observed by the thousands of landless peasants who traveled to the cities to seek work. The newcomers, often having to live in slums on the outskirts of cities, helped Mexico City become a metropolis. Thus a radically changing urban environment, and all its resource pressures, were outcomes of the porfiriato.

The tyranny and economic malaise of the Díaz years prompted Mexico's revolution and civil war (1910-1920). Along with political reforms, limiting presidents to one six-year term, central to the revolution was agrarian reform to return lands that been taken from campesinos and indigenous groups. As a result, Article 27 of the Constitution made foreign ownership of land and subsurface resources illegal. It restored much of the land to ejidos—communal lands cooperatively operated by campesinos or Indians.

President Lázaro Cárdenas (1934-1940) accelerated this process by enacting 66 percent of all agrarian reforms between the revolution and 1940. The largest ejido established, 3.2 million hectares, was in the La Laguna cotton-growing district of Coahuila and Durango. Cárdenas further encouraged these communal ventures by creating ejido credit banks (for loans to purchase seeds and farming equipment) and by supporting large irrigation projects. By the 1950s and 1960s dams and hydroelectric projects sprouted up all over Mexico forever changing rivers, valleys, and the lives of people who were displaced by the dams' reservoirs.[31] In 1938 the Cárdenas government nationalized oil reserves to create Petróleos Mexicanos (PEMEX), a move that infuriated U.S. oil companies and that hastened Mexico to become a petroleum-exploring,

-consuming, and –exporting country, with all the ecological changes those activities bring.[32]

Cárdenas was also the first president to take an active interest in conservation by pushing for the country's first forest reserves and national parks. To assist him in this endeavor, he selected Miguel Angel de Quevedo to head the new Department of Forestry, Fish, and Game. De Quevedo, who had founded the Mexican Forestry Society in 1922, was an expert on hydrology and watershed management and believed strongly in protecting forests. He advocated sustainable logging, and he worked to establish some forty national parks (although they are small in size compared to their counterparts in the United States or Canada).[33]

Mexico continued to modernize its agriculture and to industrialize in the 1940s and 1950s. During that period, the country was the first site of the "Green Revolution"—a program developed in the United States and funded by the Rockefeller Foundation to increase crop yields in less-developed nations through the use of high-yield hybridized seeds, chemical fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides.[34] It was in the Yaqui Valley of southern Sonora where Rockefeller Foundation plant breeders Norman Borlaug and John Niederhauser introduced their technological research on hybridized dwarf wheat seeds in 1947. However, most of the program was directed to monocrops for export, which started Mexico on the road to dependency on synthetic, often foreign-made, chemicals that have caused health problems and deaths of agricultural workers over the years.[35] Nonetheless, Borlaug returned to Ciudad Obregón, Sonora, in 1996 and declared that the Yaqui Valley "is one of the most progressive areas that I have had the privilege of working in over these past five decades. The valley is blessed with fertile soils, a good irrigation system and dynamic and friendly people who are receptive to the research and improved technology."[36]

As Mexico further developed its manufacturing industries, millions of citizens flocked to the country's major cities for factory jobs. Mexico City grew at alarming rates (from an area of 116 square kilometers in 1940 to 1,250 square kilometers by 1990, and by then with an estimated population of 21 million that was growing by one thousand persons a day), and pollution became a severe environmental and health problem. Smog, an especially visible representation of the problem, accounts for why 80 percent of all days in the Federal District had unacceptable ozone levels, with an estimated 3.9 million metric tons of pollutants emitted into the air every year. Likewise, 40 percent of the city is without an adequate sewage system.[37] The crisis did help spawn the development of an environmental movement in Mexico, however. One of the most active groups is the Grupo de Cien (Group of One Hundred), founded by environmental activists and writers Homero and Betty Aridjis, which lobbies for environmental policies.[38]

Urban, agricultural, and environmental problems continue to plague Mexico in the early years of the twenty-first century. And since 1994 with Mexico's entrance into the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), will the national economy improve as its promoters promised, or will increased "free" trade lead to more chemical-dependent export agriculture, and ecologically unsound mining and logging operations, as warned by its opponents? If the record of the last twelve years is any indication, the latter will continue to ring true, without providing the dreamed of employment and economic gains.[39] In fact, since NAFTA policies were adopted, more and more Mexicans have sought work (legally or illegally) in the United States, causing the governments of both countries in the post-1990s to try to deal with the increased immigration,[40] including the U.S. initiative to construct a gigantic wall along the Mexican border in the states of New Mexico, Arizona, and California.[41] Along with the diplomatic and social ramifications such a wall will have, scholars will have to study its long-range environmental effects, which will include the interruption of the free transfer of wildlife to and fro across the border, potential drainage and erosion problems in the desert, and the predictable environmental impacts that will accompany the construction process (with huge earth-moving equipment, road-building to service the machinery, and the addition of hundreds of human workers in the fragile desert landscape).

The maquiladora industry in Mexico was at first located in the cities along the border with the United States but since the 1990s more and more assembly plants have moved into Mexico's interior. It operates with fewer and less-enforced environmental regulations than U.S. factories, and grew rapidly in the wake of NAFTA. It has also been a controversial industry with labor, as the majority of maquilas are non-unionized.[42] In the last several years, however, Mexico has witnessed a slowing of the maquila sector, with some foreign-owned firms (primarily U.S., Canadian, and Japanese) moving their offshore assembly plants to even cheaper labor venues like El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, China, Indonesia, and especially Vietnam. This leaves thousands of Mexican workers without the jobs they had moved to the border cities to have (or hoped they would have), adding further pressure to city social services and to infrastructures like water and sewage systems.[43]

In 1994, the inauguration of NAFTA also prompted an uprising in Chiapas by the Zapatista Army for National Liberation (EZLN), which continues its protests into the twenty-first century. The Zapatistas claim that neo-liberal economic policies like NAFTA eat away at their natural resources without benefiting the residents, especially the Indians, of Chiapas.[44] They have demanded more local control and want to protect the tropical environment of their state. However, they were upset when Mexico joined forces with the United Nations to identify a World Biosphere Reserve in the Lacandón Forest in a large area of Chiapas that borders Guatemala, especially since no local indigenous groups were given a voice in the decision making process.[45]

A further NAFTA issue in Mexico is a concern with genetically modified corn from multinational agribusinesses that can pollute the gene pool of native varieties. With NAFTA's focus on ending agricultural tariffs, Mexico now allows wheat, rice, barley, potatoes, pork, beef, and twenty other agricultural imports (including seeds that are often genetically modified for high yields, but reduce crop, genetic, and nutrition diversity) from the United States to enter Mexico tariff free. Even with protective tariffs remaining on imports of corn and beans into Mexico (which Mexico is scheduled to eliminate in 2008), U.S. farmers enjoy a very real advantage since they often receive government subsidies and other federal crop supports and have better access to irrigation, fertilizers, and equipment to stabilize yields.[46] Mexican farmers, not being able to compete against the subsidized agribusinesses, often leave their rural areas and head either to cities in search of factory jobs (often unsuccessfully), or to the Mexico-U.S. border for jobs in maquilas (now in decline), or they try to immigrate to the United States.

Finally, tourism is now Mexico's top earner of foreign currency and is at the root of many environmental problems along the country's many beautiful beaches. Environmentalists worry about its continued effects.[47] NAFTA has encouraged increased tourism and "snowbirding" from Canada and the United States to Mexico, and thus large-scale hotels, resorts, and R.V. campgrounds continue to be built along pristine beaches and in other tropical venues in Mexico. Conservation efforts continue with earmarked national parks, but funds and bureaucratic priorities to manage them effectively or to increase their sizes for improved transfer of biological properties (or to improve corridors for wildlife habitat) are insufficient. Thus, Mexico, like elsewhere in Latin America, has experienced a rise in small, private conservation measures (often on indigenous reserves for economic development) to encourage North American and European ecotourism—a topic wide open for further research and analysis as that industry continues to develop in the twenty-first century.[48]

These and many other environmental, rural, and agricultural topics should keep historians of Mexico busy for decades to come. And certainly environmental history is adding to the analysis of this array of topics.[49] More attention will need to be given to forestry and conservation history, although good first steps have been initiated with studies on Mexico's community forests.[50] Regarding northern Mexico, borderlands topics should continue to be investigated through the lens of environmental history. Questions from the past on transboundary water rights, agricultural and mining development, and conservation initiatives will have implications on into the twenty-first century.[51]

These topics should compel us to continue studying past land uses, such as those of the historic haciendas of northern Mexico. The publication of this new edition of The Sánchez-Navarros—one of the first works on the topic, is thus indeed timely. Others have followed more recently in Charles Harris's footsteps with their own innovative approaches to Mexican hacienda history.[52] But although the great haciendas eventually faded, in large part due to the agrarian reforms ushered in by the Mexican Revolution,[53] their legacy on the rural, agricultural, and environmental history of Mexico offers valuable insights worthy of historical inquiry.


1 Charles H. Harris III, The Sánchez-Navarros: A Socio-economic Study of a Coahuilan Latifundio, 1846-1853 (Chicago: Loyola University Press, 1964), 1.

2 Ibid., 98.

3 Ibid., 62.

4 Included in this category are such works as Nathan M. Whetten, Rural Mexico (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1948); Jan Bezant, Cinco haciendas mexicanas: Tres siglos de vida rural en San Luis Potosí (1600-1910) (Mexico City: El Colegio de México, 1975); Eric Van Young, Hacienda and Market in Eighteenth-Century Mexico: The Rural Economy of the Guadalajara Region, 1675-1820 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1981); and Louisa Schell Hoberman and Susan Migden Socolow, eds., The Countryside in Colonial Latin America (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1996).

5 Eric Van Young, "Mexican Rural History since Chevalier: The Historiography of the Colonial Hacienda," Latin American Research Review 18 (1983), 6.

6 See François Chevalier's La formation des grands domains au Mexique: terre et societé aux VVIe-XVIIe siécles (Paris: Institut d'Ethnologie, 1952), or its Spanish translation La formación de los grandes latifundios en México: tierra y sociedad en los siglos XVI y XVII, transl. Antonio Alatorre, in Problemas agrícolas e industriales de México 8:1 (Jan.-Mar. 1956), 1-258; or its English translation, Land and Society in Colonial Mexico: The Great Hacienda, transl. Alvin Eustis (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1963). For another early work that placed hacienda history in a broader Latin American context, see

Eric R. Wolff and Sidney W. Mintz, "Haciendas and Plantations in Middle America and the Antilles," Social and Economic Studies 6 (1957), 380-412. For northern Mexico, Chevalier came out with an important essay on the topic at about the same time Harris was working on his Sánchez-Navarro research. See François Chevalier, "The North Mexican Hacienda: Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries," in Archibald R. Lewis and Thomas F. McGann, eds., The New World Looks at Its History (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1963), 95-107.

7 See Richard J. Morrissey, "The Establishment and Northward Expansion of Cattle Ranching in New Spain," Agricultural History 25 (1951), 115-121; Charles J. Bishko, "The Peninsular Background of Latin American Cattle Ranching," Hispanic American Historical Review 32 (1952), 591-515; Donald D. Brand, "The Early History of the Range Cattle Industry in Northern Mexico," Agricultural History 35 (1961), 132-139; William H. Dusenberry, The Mexican Mesta: The Administration of Ranching in Colonial Mexico (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1963); José Matasanz, "Introducción de la ganadería en Nueva España, 1521-535," Historia mexicana 14 (1965), 533-66; and Sandra L. Myres, The Ranch in Spanish Texas, 1691-1800 (El Paso: Texas Western Press, 1969). For a more recent addition to this literature, see Elinor G. K. Melville, "Land-Labor Relations in Sixteenth-Century Mexico: The Formation of Grazing Haciendas," Slavery and Abolition 15 (1994), 26-35; Margaret Maud McKeller, Life on a Mexican Ranche (Bethlehem, Penn.: Lehigh University Press, 1994) that looks at Coahuilan ranching; Elinor G. K. Melville, A Plague of Sheep: Environmental Consequences of the Conquest of Mexico (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994) regarding livestock in the Mezquital Valley in Hidalgo; and Lucina Hernández, ed. Historia ambiental de la ganadería en México (Xalapa, Veracruz: Instituto de Ecología, 2001) for other livestock case studies in Mexico.

8 For example, see Leslie B. Simpson, The Encomienda in New Spain: The Beginning of Spanish Mexico (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1950, 1966); James Lockhart, "Encomienda and Hacienda: The Evolution of the Great Estate in the Spanish Indies," Hispanic American Historical Review 49 (1969), 411-429; Robert G. Keith, "Encomienda, Hacienda and Corregimiento in Spanish America: A Structural Analysis," Hispanic American Historical Review 41 (1971), 431-436; Silvio Zavala, La encomienda indiana, revised edit. (Mexico City: Editorial Porrúa, 1973). For further general and regional information on the topic of agriculture and labor for a later period, see Kenneth Duncan and Ian Rutledge, eds., Land and Labour in Latin America: Essays on the Development of Agrarian Capitalism in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1977).

9 The Agricultural History Society and its journal Agricultural History have worked to effect these changes over the past decade or so, and especially to internationalize the subdiscipline, as its journal articles in that time period are testimony to.

10 Van Young, "Mexican Rural History since Chevalier," 6.

11 Ibid. On European rural and agrarian history, see for example, Matthew M. Fryde, Selected Works on Polish Agrarian History and Agriculture: A Bibliographic Survey (New York: Mid-European Studies Center, 1952); B. H. Slicher van Bath, The Agrarian History of Western Europe, 800-1850 (London: Edward Arnold, 1963); Marc Bloch, French Rural History: An Essay on Its Basic Characteristics (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1966); M. M. Postan, ed., The Agrarian Life of the Middle Ages (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1966); and Joan Thirsk, ed. The Agrarian History ofEngland and Wales, Volume IV: 1500-1640 (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1967).

12 Charles H. Harris III, personal interview with author, 13 August 2003.

13 See Charles Harris III, A Mexican Family Empire: The Latifundio of the Sánchez-Navarros, 1765-1867 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1975). Other important histories of Mexican haciendas at this time included Isabel Gonzáles Sánchez, Haciendas y ranchos de Tlaxclala en 1712 (Mexico City: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia [herafter, INAH], 1969); Bohumil Badura, "Biografía de la hacienda de San Nicolás de Ulapa," Iberoamericana Progensia 4 (1970), 75-11; Ward Barrett, The Sugar Haciendas of the Marqueses del Valle (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1970); Ricardo Lancaster-Jones, Haciendas de Jalisco y aledaños, 1506-1821 (Guadalajara: Financiera Aceptaciones, 1974); John M. Tutino, "Hacienda Social Relations in Mexico: The Chalco Region in the Era of Independence," Hispanic American Historical Review 20 (1975), 496-528; Bezant, Cinco haciendas mexicanas; Enrique Florescano, ed., Haciendas, latifundios y plantaciones en América Latina (Mexico City: Veintiuno, 1975); John M. Tutino, "Provincial Spaniards, Indian Towns, and Haciendas: Interrelated Agrarian Sectors in the Valleys of Mexico and Toluca, 1750-1810," in Ida Altman and James Lockhart, eds., Provinces of Early Mexico: Variants of Spanish American Regional Evolution (Los Angeles: University of California at Los Angeles, Latin American Center Publications, 1976), 177-194; Ida Altman, "A Family and Region in the Northern Fringe Lands: The Marqueses de Aguayo of Nuevo León and Coahuila," in Altman and Lockhart, eds., Provinces of Early Mexico, 253-273; Ursula Ewald, Estudios sobre la hacienda colonial en México: las propiedades rurales del Colegio del Espíritu Santo en Puebla (Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1976); Edith B. Coulturier, La hacienda de Hueyápan, 1550-1936 (Mexico City: Secretaría de Educación Pública, 1976); Enrique Semo, ed., Siete ensayos sobre la hacienda mexicana, 1780-1880 (Mexico City: INAH, 1977); Hans J. Prem, Milpa y hacienda: tenencia de la tierra indígena y española en la cuenca del Alto Atoyac, Puebla, México (1520-1650) (Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner Verlag. 1978); David A. Brading, Haciendas and Ranchos in the Mexican Bajío: León, 1700-1860 (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1978); John M. Tutino, "Life and Labor on North Mexican Haciendas: The Querétaro-San Luis Potosí Region, 1775-1810," in Elsa Cecilia Frost, et al, eds., El Trabajo y los trabajadores en la historia de México (Mexico City: El Colegio de México, 1979), 339-378; Gisela von Wobeger, La formación de la hacienda en al época colonial: el uso de la tierra y el agua (Mexico City: UNAM, Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas, 1983); Richard B. Lindley, Haciendas and Economic Development: Guadalajara, Mexico, at Independence (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1983); R. Buve, ed., The Haciendas of Central Mexico from Late Colonial Times to The Revolution: Labour Conditions, Hacienda Management, and Its Relation to the State (Amsterdam: Centre for Latin America Research and Documentation, 1984); Susan Deeds, "Land Tenure Patterns in Northern New Spain," The Americas 41 (1985), 446-461; and Herbert J. Nickel, Morfología social de la hacienda mexicana (Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1988). For works on the history of Jesuit haciendas, see François Chevalier, ed., Instrucciones a los hermanos jesuítas administradores de haciendas (Mexico City: UNAM, Instituto de Historia, 1950); Hermes Tovar Pinzón, compiler, "Las haciendas jesuítas de México: índice de documentos existents en el Archivo Nacional de Chile," Historia de México 20 (1971), 135-189; James Denson Riley, "Santa Lucía: desarrollo y administración de una hacienda jesuíta en el siglo XVIII," Historia de México 23 (1973), 238-283; James Denson Riley, Hacendados jesuítas en México: la administración de los bienes inmuebles del Colegio Máximo de San Pedro y San Pablo de la ciudad de México, 1985-1767 (Mexico City: Secretaría de Educación Pública, 1976); and Herman W. Konrad, A Jesuit Hacienda in Colonial Mexico: Santa Lucía, 1576-1767 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1980). For synthesis and analyis of many of these works, see Magnus Mörner, "The Spanish American Hacienda: A Survey of Recent Research and Debate," Hispanic American Historical Review 53 (1973), 183-216.

14 See Charles H. Harris III and Louis R. Sadler, The Border and the Revolution (Las Cruces: Center for Latin American Studies/Joint Border Research Institute, New Mexico State University, 1988) [second ed., Silver City, N.M.: High-Lonesome Books, 1988]; Charles H. Harris III and Louis R. Sadler, The Archaeologist Was a Spy: Sylvanus G. Morley and the Office of Naval Intelligence (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2003); and Charles H. Harris III and Louis R. Sadler, The Texas Rangers and the Mexican Revolution: The Bloodiest Decade, 1910-1920 (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2004).

15 William H. Beezley, personal communication, Apr. 7, 2001.

16 Parts of the following section were originally published by the author as the entry "Mexico" in Stephen Krech III, J. R. McNeill, and Carolyn Merchants, eds., Encyclopedia of World Environmental History Vol. 2 (New York: Routledge, 2004), 835-838, and are used here with permission.

17For works on the history of irrigation in Mexico, see Luis Chávez Orozco, "La irrigación en México: Ensayo histórico," Problemas Agrícolas e Industriales de México 11 (1950), 13-31; Karl Wittfogel, "The Hydraulic Approach to Pre-Hispanic MesoAmerica," in Frederick Johnson, ed., Chronology and Irrigation: The Prehistory of the Tehuacán Valley (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1972), 59-80; Clifton B. Kroeber, Man, Land, and Water: Mexico's Farmland Irrigation Policies, 1885-1911 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984); Kjell I. Enge and Scott Whiteford, The Keepers of Water and Earth: Mexican Rural and Social Organization and Irrigation (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1989); Luis Aboites Aguilar, El agua de la nación: una historia política (Mexico City: CIESA, 1998); Blanca Estela Suárez, ed., Historia de los usos del agua en México: oligarquías, empresas y ayuntamientos (Mexico City: Comisión Nacional de Agua, 1998). As for the history of the exploitation of aquifers, see José Luis Moreno Vásquez, Por Abajo del Agua: Sobreexplotación y agotamiento del acuífero de la Costa de Hermosillo, 1945-2005 (Hermosillo: El Colegio de Sonora, 2006).

18 For an authoritative account of the dry forest in Mexico, see Angelina Martínez-Yrízar, et al, "Structure and Functioning of Tropical Deciduous Forest in Western Mexico," in Robert H. Robichaux and David A. Yetman, eds., The Tropical Dry Deciduous Forest of Alamos: Biodiversity of a Threatened Ecosystem in Mexico (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2000). Specifically for Alamos, see Robichaux and Yetman, eds. The Tropical Dry Forest of Alamos; and Paul S. Martin, et al, eds., Gentry's Río Mayo Plants: The Tropical Deciduous Forest and Environs of Northwest Mexico (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1998). For the environmental history of the larger bosque seco bioregion, see Sterling Evans, Bosque Seco:

The Historical Ecology of the Tropical Dry Forest of Central America and Mexico (forthcoming).

19 Lesley Bird Simpson captured the spirit of this sentiment in his book with that title, Many Mexicos (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1941), that has enjoyed wide popularity and several different editions and printings.

20 For further information, see José G. Montes de Oca, Xochimilco y sus chinampas (Mexico City: Talleres Gráficos de la Nación, 1926); William M. Denevan, "Aboriginal Drained-Field Cultivation in the Americas," Science 169 (Aug. 1970), 647-654; Edward E. Calnek, "Settlement Patterns and Chinampa Agriculture at Tenochtitlán," American Antiquities 37 (1972), 104-115; Richard E. Blanton, "Prehispanic Adaptation in the Iztalpalapa Region, Mexico," Science 175 (Mar. 1972), 1317-1326; Alfred H. Siemans, "Wetland Agriculture in Pre-Hispanic Mesoamerica," Geographical Review 73 (1983), 166-181; Teresa Rojas Rabiela, ed., Agricultura chinampera: compilación histórica (Chapingo: Universidad Autónoma Chapingo, 1983); Raul Ávila López, Chinampas de Iztalpalapa, D.F. (Mexico City: INAH, 1991); Andrew Sluyter, "Intensive Wetland Agriculture in Mesoamerica: Space, Time, and Form," Annals of the Association of American Geographers 84 (1994), 557-584; and Teresa Rojas Rabiela, Presente, pasado y futuro de las chinampas (Mexico City: CIESA, 1995).

21 Lane Simonian, Defending the Land of the Jaguar: A History of Conservation in Mexico (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1995), 25.

22 For further information, see Nancy M. Farris, Maya Society under Colonial Rule: The Collective Enterprise of Survival (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984).

23 The theory of this biological conquest has been advanced by Alfred Crosby in his two books The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492 (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1972), and Ecological Imperialism: The Biological Expansion of Europe, 900-1900 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986). See also, Joel Simon, Endangered Mexico: An Environment on the Edge (San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1997), Chapter 1 "Environmental Conquests." For more on the colonial era demographic collapse of Mexico, see William M. Denevan, ed., The Native Population of the Americas in 1492 (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1976). For more on the history of the colonial-era Nahuas, see Charles Gibson, The Aztecs Under Spanish Rule: A History of the Indians of the Valley of Mexico, 1519-1810 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1964); and James Lockhart, The Nahuas After the Conquest: A Social and Cultural History of the Indians of Central Mexico, Sixteenth through Eighteenth Centuries (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1992).

24 See Crosby, The Columbian Exchange, especially Chapter 3, "Old World Plants and Animals in the New World."

25 Melville, A Plague of Sheep, 6.

26 Crosby, Ecological Imperialism, 89.

27 On sugar plantations, see Wolf and Mintz, "Haciendas and Plantations in Middle America and the Antilles, " Fernando Sandoval, La industria del azúcar en Nueva España (Mexico City: UNAM, 1951); and Barrett, The Sugar Hacienda of the Marqueses del Valle.

28 For more on labor, see Silvio Zavala and María Castelo, Fuentes para la historia del trabajo en Nueva España 8 vols. (Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1939-1946); and Juan A. Villamarín and Judith E. Villamarín, Indian Labor in Mainland Colonial Spanish America (Newark, DE: University of Delaware, Latin American Studies Program, 1975). On mining, see Robert C. West, The Mining Community of Northern New Spain: The Parral Mining District (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1949); Lesley B. Simpson, Exploitation of the Land in Central Mexico in the Sixteenth Century (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1952); Peter J. Bakewell, Silver Mining and Society in Colonial Mexico: Zacatecas, 1546-1700 (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1971); David A. Brading, Miners and Merchants in Bourbon Mexico, 1763-1810 (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1971); Carlos Rubén Ruiz Medrano, Plata labrada en la real hacienda: estudio fiscal novohispano, 1739-1800 (Mexico City: INAH, 2002); and Edith Boorstein Couturier, The Silver King: The Remarkable Life of the Count of Regla in Colonial Mexico (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2003).

29 See chapter 1.

30 On the expansion of Mexican rails and mines, see John Coatsworth, "Railroads, Landholding, and Agrarian Protest in the Early Porfiriato," Hispanic American Historical Review 54 (1974), 48-71; Robert W. Randall, "Mexico's Pre-Revolutionary Reckoning with Railroads," The Americas 42 (1985), 1-28; David Pletcher, Rails, Mines, and Progress: Seven American Promoters in Mexico, 1867-1911 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1958); Marvin D. Bernstein, The Mexican Mining Industry, 1890-1950: A Study of the Interactions of Politics, Economics, and Technology (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1964); José Alfredo Urbe Salas, Empresarios de metal amarrillo en México, 1898-1938 (Iztapalapa, Mexico: Universidad Autónama Metropolitana, Iztapalapa, 2003); On Yucatán's henequen industry, see Allan Wells, Yucatán's Gilded Age: Haciendas, Henequen, and International Harvester (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1985); and Sterling Evans, Bound in Twine: The History and Ecology of the Henequen-Wheat Complex for Mexico and the American and Canadian Plains, 1880-1950 (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2007).

31For general information see Aboites, El agua de la nación, and for case studies, see Casey Walsh, Building the Borderlands: Irrigation, Development, and Cotton in Northern Mexico (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, forthcoming); Sterling Evans, Damming Sonora: Water, Agriculture, and Environmental Change in Northwest Mexico (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, forthcoming); and Mikael D. Wolfe, "River of Revolution: The Politics of Water and Rural Social Change in the Río Nazas Basin, La Laguna, Mexico, 1900-1970," PhD diss., University of Chicago, in progress.

32 For further information, see Myrna Santiago, The Ecology of Oil: Environment, Labor, and the Mexican Revolution, 1900-1938 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006).

33 See Emily Wakild, "Resources, Communities, and Conservation: The Creation of National Parks in Revolutionary Mexico under President Lázaro Cárdenas, 1934-1940," PhD diss., University of Arizona, 2007; Simonian, Defending the Land of the Jaguar, especially chapter 4 "Miguel Angel de Quevedo: The Apostle of the Tree."

34 One of the better studies on this initiative is by K. M. Bazlul, The Green Revolution: An International Biography (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1986). See also, Wilson Picado U., "Conexiones de la Revolución Verde," PhD diss., University of Santiago de Compostela, 2007.

35 This situation is best described in Angus Wright, The Death of Ramón González: The Modern Agricultural Dilemma (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1992, 2006).

36 Norman Borlaug, Ciudad Obregón, 1 April 1996, quoted in "Cajeme, 2006-2009," www.http://cdob1.com/investor/nborlaug.php .

37 Pete Hamill, "Where the Air Was Clear," Audubon 95 (Jan.-Feb. 1993), 38-50. See also, Simon, Endangered Mexico, chapter 3 "The Sinking City."

38 See Simon, Endangered Mexico, chapter 9 "The Political Environment" for more on the history of the Mexican environmental movement.

39 For more on the environmental effects of NAFTA, see Richard Kiy and John Wirth, eds., Environmental Management on North America's Borders (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1998); Stephen Mumme, "In Focus: NAFTA and the Environment," Foreign Policy in Focus 4 (1999); Kevin Gallagher, Free Trade and the Environment: Mexico, NAFTA, and Beyond (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2004); and Debra J. Davidson and Ross E. Mitchell, "Environmental Challenges to International Trade," in Edward J. Chambers and Peter H. Smith, eds., NAFTA in the New Millenium (La Jolla: Center fro U.S.-Mexican Studies, University of California, San Diego, and Edmonton: University of Alberta Press, 2002), 265-286. For economic analysis of NAFTA, see Peter H. Smith, "From NAFTA to FTAA: Paths Toward Hemispheric Integration," in Chambers and Smith, eds., NAFTA in the New Millenium, 471-495; Stephen J. Randall and Herman W. Konrad, eds., NAFTA in Transition (Calgary: University of Calgary Press, 1995); Mary Jordan and Kevin Sullivan, "Trade Brings Riches, But Not to Mexico's Poor," Washington Post (Mar. 22, 2003); Jeff Faux, "How NAFTA Failed Mexico," American Prospect (July 1, 2003), http://www.prospect.org/print/V14/7/faux-j.html; Cecilia Dugger, "Report Finds Few Benefits for Mexico in NAFTA," New York Times (Nov. 19, 2003); and Tim Wiener, "Free Trade at 10: Growing Pains Are Clear," New York Times (Dec. 27, 2003). For an opposing view that suggests that NAFTA has been a "huge success," see Louis E. V. Nevaer, NAFTA's Second Decade: Assessing Opportunities in the Mexican and Canadian Markets (Mason, OH: South-Western Educational Publications, 2004).

40 See Migration News (May 2002).

41 "Bush Signs Mexico Fence Into Law," http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/Americas/6088084.stm (Oct. 26, 2006).

42 For more on the social and environmental dilemmas of the maquiladoras, see Leslie Sklair, Assembling for Development: The Maquila Industry in Mexico and the United States (La Jolla, CA: Center for Mexican-U.S. Studies, University of California-San Diego, 1993); John Warnock, The Other Mexico: The North American Triangle Completed (Montreal: Black Rose Books, 1995), especially chapter 3 "Maquila Mexico;" Kathryn Kopinak, Desert Capitalism: What Are the Maquiladoras? (Montreal: Black Rose Books, 1997); Kathryn Kopinak, ed., The Social Costs of Industrial Growth in Northern Mexico (La Jolla, CA: Center for Mexican-U.S. Studies, University of California-San Diego, 2004), Simon, Endangered Mexico, chapter 8 "Dumping on the Border;" and David Bacon, The Children of NAFTA: Labor Wars on the U.S.-Mexico Border (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004).

43 See, for example, United States Congress, Government Accounting Office, "International Trade: Mexico's Maquiladora Decline Affects U.S.-Mexico Border Communities and Trade," GAO Report #03-891 (July 2003).

44For historical background, consult George A. Collier, Basta!: Land and the the Zapatista Rebellion in Chiapas (Oakland: Food First Books, 1994, 1999); John Ross, Rebellion from the Roots: Indian Uprising in Chiapas (Monroe, ME: Common Courage Press, 1995); Neyra P. Alvarado Solís, "Land and Indigenous Cosmovision," in Elaine Katzenberger, ed. First World, Ha, Ha, Ha: The Zapatista Challenge (San Franciscio: City Light Books, 1995); 127-131; Neil Harvey, The Chiapas Rebellion: The Struggle for Land and Democracy (Durham: Duke University Press, 1998); Thomas Benjamin, "A Time of Reconquest: History, the Maya Revival, and the Zapatista Rebellion in Chiapas," American Historical Review 105 (2000), 417-450; Stephen Lewis, Ambivalent Revolution: Forging State and Nation in Chiapas, 1910-1945 (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2005); and Juana Ponce de León, ed., Our Word is Our Weapon: Selected Writings of Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2001).

45 An important resource on this issue is Philip Howard, "The History of Ecological Marginalization in Chiapas," Environmental History (3 (1998), 357-377. See also, Vincent Morris, "Rainforest Revolt: In Mexico's Lacandón, a Fight to Save a Ruined Homeland," Audubon (May 1994); John Ross, "Unintended Enemies: Save a Rainforest, Start a Revolution," Sierra (July 1994); and Dan Berg, "Environmental Degradation and the Zapatistas," Three River Confluence (1996). For a contrasting viewpoint that argues against the common notion of Zapatista environmentalism, see Simon, Endangered Mexico, chapter 4 "Jungle Warfare."

46 See Tim Weiner, "In Corn's Cradle: U.S. Imports Bury Family Farms," New York Times (Feb. 26, 2002); and Michael M. Veeman, Terrence S. Veeman, and Ryan Hoskins, "NAFTA and Agriculture: Challenges for Trade and Policy," in Chambers and Smith, eds., NAFTA in the New Millennium, 305-330.

47 See Simon, Endangered Mexico, chapter 7 "Trouble in Paradise;" Héctor Manuel Romero, Cronica mexicana del turismo (Mexico City: M. Porrúa Editores, 1977); Eugenio MacDonald Escobedo, Turismo: una recapitulación (Mexico City: publisher not listed, 1981); Andrea Boardman, Destination Mexico, "a Foreign Land a Step Away": U.S. Tourism to Mexico, 1880s to 1950s (Dallas: DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University, 2001); and Dina Berger, The Development of Mexico's Tourism Industry: Pyramids by Day, Martinis by Night (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006).

48 For theoretical and background analysis, a good starting point is Kreg Lindberg and Donald E. Hawkins, eds., Ecotourism: A Guide for Planners and Managers (North Bennington, VT: The Ecotourism Society, 1993); and Martha Honey, Ecotourism and Sustainable Development: Who Owns Paradise? (Washington: Island Press, 1999). Specifically for Mexico, see Magali Daltabout Godas, Ecoturismo y desarrollo sustentable: impacto en comunidades rurales de la selva maya (Cuernavaca, Morelos: UNAM, Centro Regional de Investigaciones Multidisciplinarias, 2000); and Ana L. Báez, Guía para las mejoras prácticas de ecoturismo en áreas protegidas (Mexico City: Comisión Nacional para el Desarrollo de Pueblos Indígenas, 2003).

49 For an example, see Arij Ouweneel, Shadows over Anahuac: An Ecological Interpretation of Crisis and Development in Central Mexico, 1730-1800 (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1996); and Santiago, The Ecology of Oil: Environment, Labor, and the Mexican Revolution, 1900-1938.

50 See David Barton Bray, Leticia Merino-Pérez, and Deborah Barry, eds. The Community Forests of Mexico: Managing for Sustainable Landscapes (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2005) and especially for some historical analysis, chapter 2 by Christopher Boyer, "Contested Terrain: Forestry Regimes, and Community Responses in Northeastern Michoacán, 1940-2000." For the history of scientific research and environmental advocacy in the tropical forests of Tamaulipas, see Arturo Longoria's Keepers of the Wilderness (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2000); and Fred and Marie S. Webster, The Road to El Cielo: Mexico's Forest in the Clouds (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2001).

51 Starting places here for some of these questions could include Samuel Truett, "Neighbors by Nature: Rethinking Region, Nation, and Environmental History in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands," Environmental History 2 (1997), 160-178; and Evan R. Ward, Border Oasis: Water and the Political Ecology of the Colorado River Delta, 1940-1975 (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2003). On bi-national water issues, see Stephen P. Mumme, Continuity and Change in U.S.-Mexico Land and Water Relations: The Politics of the International Boundary and Water Commission (Washington: Wilson Center, 1980); and Stephen P. Mumme, Apportioning Groundwater Beneath the U.S.-Mexico Border: Obstacles and Alternatives (La Jolla: Center for Mexican-U.S. Studies, University of California at San Diego, 1988). On transboundary conservation, see "Dry Borders," special double edition of Journal of the Southwest 39 (1997); and Emily Wakild, "Border National Parks in Mexico: Separate Conservation Visions of the Border," paper presented at the VII Meeting of Mexican, United States, and Canadian Historians of Mexico (Oct. 2006).

52 See, for example, María Teresa Jarquín Ortega, et al, eds., Origen y evolución de la hacienda en México, siglos XVI al XX: memorias del simposio realizado del 27 al 30 septiembre de 1989 (Zincantepec, Estado de México: Universidad Iberoamericana, 1990); Guillermo Porras Múñoz, Haciendas de Chihuahua (Chihuahua: Gobierno del Estado de Chihuahua, 1993); Atanasio G. Saravia. Las haciendas de la Nueva Vizcaya (Durango: Secretaría de Educación, Cultura y Deporte, 1995); Ricardo Rendón García, Vida cotidiana en las haciendas de Mexico (Mexico City: Fomento Cultural Banamex, 1997); Isabel González Sánchez, Haciendas, tumultos y trabajadores: Puebla-Tlaxcala, 1778-1798 (Mexico City: INAH, 1997); Erasmo Sáenz Carrete, Haciendas y minas: una historia de Santa María del Oro, Durango, y su región (Mexico City: Portrerillos Editores, 1999); Rodolfo Fernández, Mucha tierra y pocos dueños: estancias, haciendas y latifundias aveleños (Mexico City: INAH, 1999); Daniel Nierman, The Hacienda in Mexico (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2003); and Vincent Pérez, Remembering the Hacienda: History and Memory in the Mexican-American Southwest (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2006).

53 For a thorough review, see Alan Knight, "Land and Society in Revolutionary Mexico: The Destruction of the Great Haciendas," Mexican Studies/Estudios mexicanos 7 (1991), 73-104.



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