Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Notes on Contributors
- Glossary
- 1 Business History in Latin America: an introduction
- 2 Business History in Argentina
- 3 Business History in Brazil from the mid-nineteenth century to 1945
- 4 Business History in Chile
- 5 Business History in Colombia
- 6 Regional Studies and Business History in Mexico since 1975
- 7 Business History in Peru
- 8 Economic and Business History in Venezuela
- Bibliography
- Index
6 - Regional Studies and Business History in Mexico since 1975
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Notes on Contributors
- Glossary
- 1 Business History in Latin America: an introduction
- 2 Business History in Argentina
- 3 Business History in Brazil from the mid-nineteenth century to 1945
- 4 Business History in Chile
- 5 Business History in Colombia
- 6 Regional Studies and Business History in Mexico since 1975
- 7 Business History in Peru
- 8 Economic and Business History in Venezuela
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Research on the origins, development and activities of business groups in Mexico accelerated relatively quickly after the middle of the 1970s. During the following decade it attained an obvious importance. An analysis of a large proportion of the published work allows one to pick out three significant features. First, developments in this particular field of historical research coincided with the growth of regional studies in Mexico. Second, from the very beginning these studies of businessmen were directly linked to the broader analysis of economic and social history. Third, if one adopts these two characteristics as the major points of reference, then one should also add that research interest has centred, above all, on the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, with a particular concentration on the period between the 1840s and 1920.
Before commencing the detailed analysis of the literature, one point must be emphasised. In contrast to several of the other chapters in this volume which review books and articles published both in Latin America and those published overseas, this discussion is based almost entirely on studies published in Mexico itself. In part this reflects the substantial volume of research produced in Mexico (in comparison with the work on business history in other countries). However, it also draws attention to the way in which the work undertaken in Mexico since the mid-1970s has changed perceptions of business history. It has resulted in conclusions quite unlike those of the general histories which were published before the 1980s.
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- Information
- Business History in Latin AmericaThe Experience of Seven Countries, pp. 116 - 127Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 1999
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