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dc.creatorPozas Loyo, Andrea
dc.date.accessioned2019-04-08T16:20:14Z
dc.date.available2019-04-08T16:20:14Z
dc.date.issued2018-11-13
dc.identifier.urihttp://ru.juridicas.unam.mx:80/xmlui/handle/123456789/40935
dc.description.abstractThe Mexican Constitution of 1917 granted the Supreme Court the power to handpick lower court judges and oversee their careers. For almost eight decades this capacity was not regulated. To fill this void, the justices began to take turns filling vacancies which developed into an informal institution – the so-called ‘Gentlemen’s Pact’. Using original archival data, we document and describe the birth and development of this practice and argue that it consolidated into an informal institution as the judiciary increased in size. We uncover the workings of this social norm that established a patronage model of judicial selection. Our analysis period ends in 1994, when a constitutional reform created a judicial council with the explicit aim of ending patronage and corruption within the judiciary.es_MX
dc.formatapplication/httpes_MX
dc.language.isoenes_MX
dc.publisherSAGEes_MX
dc.relation.ispartofVol 39, No. 5 (13 de noviembre 2018)
dc.relation.ispartofhttps://journals.sagepub.com/home/ips
dc.sourceInternational Political Science Review Vol 39, No. 5 (13 de noviembre 2018)es_MX
dc.titleAnatomy of an Informal Institution: Patronage Networks and the ‘Gentlemen’s Pact’ in the Mexican Federal Judiciary, 1917-1994es_MX
dc.typeArticlees_MX
dc.identifier.urlhttps://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0192512118773414


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