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“Urban Ejidos: The Agrarian Origins of Urban Development Problems in 
Post-revolutionary Mexico”

Moramay López-Alonso
Associate Professor, Rice University

The accelerated and disorganized spread of irregular settlements by low-income 
people is often used as the textbook example of the unequal distribution of the 
wealth created in post-revolutionary Mexico. Adding to the disorganization, a 
significant portion of urban properties in Mexican cities furthermore pay no 
taxes, because the land registries have numerous and serious flaws. Politicians 
and policymakers agree on the fact that many irregularities exist in urban 
settlements, and that the lack of property regulation in particular poses 
multiple challenges to the adequate functioning of cities. Less well known is 
the origin of these urban problems in agrarian reforms. This study aims to show 
that the agrarian reforms in fact contributed to some of the most severe 
challenges that Mexican cities face today, including overcrowding of 
settlements that lack the basic urban infrastructure, the proliferation of 
squatters and the low levels of property tax collection.

Friday, January 23
E51-275
4:00-5:30 PM

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