1. MEXICAN JUSTICE: Codified Law, Patronage, and the Regulation of Social Affairs in Guerrero, Mexico.
- Author
-
Kyle, Chris and Yaworsky, William
- Subjects
- *
MANNERS & customs , *SOCIAL interaction , *PATRONAGE , *HUMAN rights advocacy , *SOCIAL institutions , *DEBATE , *COMMUNITIES , *CUSTOMARY law , *ROMAN law , *SOCIAL norms - Abstract
Social life in Mexico has long been regulated not by codified jural rules and the institutions of the state but by means of hierarchically structured patronage networks. This article illustrates the pervasiveness of patronage relationships by looking at the activities of a human rights advocacy organization operating in Chilapa, Guerrero. Though ostensibly committed to working through the jural rules and the institutions of the state, practical reality commonly intrudes and forces the organization to activate patronage ties in order to assist their clients. The article also explores the implications of patronage relationships for ongoing debates about the presumed irreconcilability of the state's codified law and the customary law of indigenous communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF