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Mexico Cultural Trends

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For your final essay, describe the content and consequences of the major events and trends in Mexico since the day that the last gun stopped firing at the Plaza of the Three Cultures. What major social, cultural, political reforms occurred after the 1968 massacre.
The Plaza of Three Culture is a symbol of Mexico’s unique cultural heritage. It was once the center of some of the most powerful Native American empires (Aztec), Mexico became a flourishing Spanish colony in the 16th century. It is located at the ancient city Aztec city of Tlatelolco where you can see the ruins of ________________. You can also see the Colonial Cathedral of Santiago which dates back to 1524 (although it was rebuilt in 1609), inside there is the baptismal fountain …show more content…

All parties were granted fairer access to public funding and to the broadcast media. These changes served to weaken the PRI party and transform the country from a one-party system. The international attention of the 1994 elections affected the fairness of the election. The 1994 election resulted in a win for the PRI’s candidate, Ernesto Zedillo, but the margin between the PRI and Pan grew closer, and the resurgent PAN became the major opposition …show more content…

This election resulted in a loss for the PRI. The National Action Party won this election. While the party did not hold the same liberal views as the Democratic Revolutionary Party, it did present an opportunity for a new government. President Vicente Fox created a new office to investigate and prosecute those responsible for the murders of innocent political/ social activists. This act was promising to the citizens who long awaited the conviction of those responsible for the murder of innocent citizens. In _________, Álvarez, Felix Hernández Gamundi and Jesus Martin del Campo filed a legal case against Echevarria over the Tlatelolco massacre, the killings of other students in a street protest in 1971, and the “dirty war” in which the Mexican government targeted leftists for assassination through the rest of the 1970s. Formal charges were finally made against Luis Echevarria Alvarez and Luis Gutierrez Oropeza for the Tlatelolco murders, and Mario Moya Palencia and Alfonso Martinez Dominguez, among others, for the 1971 attacks. In the end, however, these former officials were able to avoid trial after invoking legal technicalities challenging the ability of prosecutors to indict them. In reality, the political system itself was reluctant to unearth a network of responsibility that would have spread to include many others, and it became clear that the new political party, PAN, was in fact not very different from the

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