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  • Mestaz, James V.
     
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  • Mayo Indians -- Economic conditions
     
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  • Mayo Indians -- Religion
     
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  • Mayo Indians -- Politics and government
     
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  • Water resources development
     
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  • Water rights
     
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  • Irrigation
     
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  • Mayo (Indiens) -- Religion
     
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  • Mayo (Indiens) -- Conditions economiques
     
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  • NATURE / Natural Resources
     
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  • HISTORY / Latin America / Mexico
     
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  • Water rights
     
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  • Water resources development
     
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  • Mayo Indians -- Religion
     
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  • Irrigation
     
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  • Fuerte River (Mexico)
     
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     MARC Display
    Strength from the waters a history of indigenous mobilization in northwest Mexico / James V. Mestaz
     
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    Author: 
    Mestaz, James V. author
    Title: 
    Strength from the waters a history of indigenous mobilization in northwest Mexico / James V. Mestaz
    Publisher: 
    Lincoln University of Nebraska Press [2022]
    Copyright: 
    ©2022
    Description: 
    1 online resource
    Electronic Resource: 
    https://smithsonian.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/smithsonian/detail.action?docID=7049212
    Series: 
    Confluencias
    Notes: 
    Online resource; title from PDF title page (ProQuest Ebook Central platform, viewed September 27, 2022)
    Summary: 
    "Strength from the Waters demonstrates how the Mayo people of northwestern Mexico used newly available opportunities such as irrigation laws, land reform, and cooperatives to maintain their connection to the river system and protect their indigenous identities"--
    "Strength from the Waters is an environmental and social history that frames economic development, environmental concerns, and Indigenous mobilization within the context of a timeless issue: access to water. Between 1927 and 1970 the Mayo people-an Indigenous group in northwestern Mexico-confronted changing access to the largest freshwater source in the region, the Fuerte River. In Strength from the Waters James V. Mestaz demonstrates how the Mayo people used newly available opportunities such as irrigation laws, land reform, and cooperatives to maintain their connection to their river system and protect their Indigenous identity. By using irrigation technologies to increase crop production and protect lands from outsiders trying to claim it as fallow, the Mayo of northern Sinaloa simultaneously preserved their identity by continuing to conduct traditional religious rituals that paid homage to the Fuerte River. This shift in approach to both new technologies and natural resources promoted their physical and cultural survival and ensured a reciprocal connection to the Fuerte River, which bound them together as Mayo. Mestaz examines this changing link between hydraulic technology and Mayo tradition to reconsider the importance of water in relation to the state's control of the river and the ways the natural landscape transformed relations between individuals and the state, altering the social, political, ecological, and ethnic dynamics within several Indigenous villages. Strength from the Waters significantly contributes to contemporary Mexicanist scholarship by using an environmental and ethnohistorical approach to water access, Indigenous identity, and natural resource management to interrogate Mexican modernity in the twentieth century. "--
    Bibliography Note: 
    Includes bibliographical references and index
    Contents: 
    Their technology, our way : Los Goros and Fuerte River infrastructure, 1927 to 1942 -- Sweetness and water power : The SICAE Sugarcane Cooperative and Mayo struggles for water, 1944 to 1958 -- When the state fails the gods remain : independent Mayo water control strategies, 1944 to 1957 -- The inward turn : Mayo hydraulic labor, millenarian movements, and changing rituals, 1947 to 1963 -- From our river to theirs : the effects of hydraulic development, 1955 to 1970 -- Epilogue : Remaining strong
    Restrictions: 
    Non-linear
    Local Note: 
    Purchased with funds from the S. Dillon Ripley Endowment.
    Elecresource
    Subject: 
    Mayo Indians -- Economic conditions
    Mayo Indians -- Religion
    Mayo Indians -- Politics and government
    Water resources development -- Mexco -- Fuerte River Region
    Water rights -- Mexico -- Fuerte River Region
    Irrigation -- Mexico -- Fuerte River Region
    Mayo (Indiens) -- Religion
    Mayo (Indiens) -- Conditions economiques
    NATURE / Natural Resources
    HISTORY / Latin America / Mexico
    Water rights
    Water resources development
    Mayo Indians -- Religion
    Irrigation
    Fuerte River (Mexico) -- History -- 20th century
    Fuerte River Valley (Mexico) -- History -- 20th century
    Mexico -- Fuerte River Valley
    Genre: 
    History
    Uniform Title: 
    ProQuest eBooks.
    Added Series: 
    Coleção Confluências.
    ISBN: 
    1496232909
    9781496232908
    9781496232892
    1496232895
    Copy/Holding information
    Call No.CollectionBarcodeStatus 
    F1221.M3 M39 2022 (Internet)Electronic Resourcesmq2113228CatalogedRequest Copy
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