You are warmly invited to

“Water for the Revolution: An Envirotech History of Agrarian Reform in ‘La 
Laguna,’ Mexico”

Mikael Wolfe
Assistant Professor, Stanford University

I use an envirotech approach to revise understanding of Mexican agrarian 
reform, the principal raison d’être of the 1910 Mexican Revolution central to 
postrevolutionary Mexican state formation.  I focus on the understudied role of 
engineers (técnicos) trying to supply sufficient water for massive land 
redistribution in the arid north central cotton rich Laguna region in 1936. 
Serving as mediators between the state, society, and nonhuman nature, I argue 
that técnicos faced an inherent contradiction between the urgency for water 
conservation and satisfying insatiable demand for water by deploying invasive 
hydraulic technology—a contradiction that made agrarian reform unsustainable in 
the long term.


Monday, January 26
E51-275
4:00-5:30 PM

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