The twentieth-century "Mexican Miracle," which solidified the
dominant position of the PRI, has been well documented. A part of
the PRI's success story that has not hitherto been told is that of
the creation of the welfare state, its impact (particularly on the
roles of women), and the consequent transformation of Mexican
society. A central focus of the PRI's welfare policy was to protect
women and children. An important by-product of this effort was to
provide new opportunities for women of the middle and upper classes
to carve out a political role for themselves at a time when they
did not yet enjoy suffrage and to participate as social workers,
administrators, or volunteers. In Gender and Welfare in Mexico,
Nichole Sanders uses archival sources from the Ministry of Health
and Welfare and contemporary periodical literature to explain how
the creation of the Mexican welfare state was gendered--and how the
process reflected both international and Mexican discourses on
gender, the family, and economic development.
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