Denise Dresser
“What’s Wrong with Mexico? Drugs, Dinosaurs and Dithering”

April 24, 2009

Professor Denise Dresser speaks about the current political state in Mexico and potential manners of reform.

Section I of Professor Dresser's talk available on YouTube

Denise Dresser will evaluate the limitations of the Calderon government’s “war” on drugs and how the current climate of insecurity explains the renewed electoral strength and political renaissance of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). She will also address the characteristics of Mexico’s dysfunctional political economy that explain why the country seems condemned to “muddle through,” instead of undertaking substantive reforms that would assure greater equality and growth.

Denise Dresser is a professor of Political Science at the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM) where she has taught comparative politics, political economy and Mexican politics since 1991. She writes a political column for the Mexican newspaper Reforma and the news weekly Proceso and was the host of the political talk shows “Entreversiones” and “El País de Uno” on Mexican television.

Lisa Garcia Bedolla speaks at CLAS, March 2009
Professor Dresser speaks to the audience.

Lisa Garcia Bedolla speaks at CLAS, March 2009
Professor Dresser outside Moses Hal

 

 

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