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  • Contributors

Ben Fallaw is assistant professor of history and Latin American Studies at Colby College. He is the author of Cárdenas Compromised: The Failure of Reform in Yucatán (2001). He is currently an ACLS Charles A. Ryskamp Fellow researching the relationship between the state and civil society in Mexico between 1920 and 1940.

Rafael Dobado González is professor of economic history at the Universidad Complutense in Madrid. His research interests include colonial and postcolonial Mexican economic history and Spanish regional economic history. He has published several journal articles and book chapters and the following are two of his most recent publications: "Las minas de Almadén, el monopolio de azogue y la producción de plata en Nueva España en el siglo XVIII," in La savia del imperio: Tres estudios de economía colonial, ed. Julio Sánchez Gómez, Guillermo Mira, and Rafael Dobado González (1997); and, with Guatavo Marrero, "Minería crecomiento económico y costes de la independencia en México," Revista de Historia Económica 19, no. 3 (2001).

Carmen Sesto is professor of history at Universidad Interamericana and professor of methodology for graduate research at the University of Buenos Aires. She is the author of Estructura de la producción y comercialización del ganado bovino en la provincia de Buenos Aires a fines del siglo XIX (1998). [End Page v]

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