"" Pistoleros and Popular Movements is an astonishingly thorough work to which all students of twentieth century Oaxaca will have to refer, and it makes arguments about the post-1940 period that all historians of modern Mexico must consider.""--Kenneth F. Maffitt, A Contracorriente ""[Smith] makes use of extensive state and federal archives (public and private) along with Oaxacan newspapers and a broad range of secondary works.""--S. F. Voss, CHOICE ""Amply researched and meticulously documented, this book enriches our understanding of the enduring nature of the PRI.""--Tanals Padilla, American Historical Review ""Local and state politics in the 1940s and early 1950s Mexico is largely uncharted terrain. Smith's careful archival work tells us a great deal that we did not know before about the relationships between popular movements and organizations, regional and state elites, and national politics and policies during this period.
""--Jennie Purnell, Americas ""Smith's book enters a new field, a history of state/society relations in post-1940 Mexico, with methodological and interpretive panache. This big book, dealing with big processes, should exert a big influence on scholars of both its thematic and its geographical concerns.""--Paul Gillingham, Journal of Interdisciplinary History ""Ben Smith has written a wonderful and important book that will remain obligatory reading for many years to come for those interested in state formation, and for scholars interested in the fascinating postrevolutionary history of Oaxaca. The combination of methodological rigor, theoretical proficiency, and good writing makes this a book that deserves many readers from history students to political science professors.""--Wil Pansters, European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies.