Mexico’s foreign policy and international development cooperation 10 years after its law and the AMEXCID
Abstract
In 2011, Mexico’s international development cooperation (IDC) had a turning point with the enactment of the IDC Law and the creation of the IDC Agency. After 10 years, the objective of this article is to take stock of the Mexican IDC Law and Agency to identify its most outstanding achievements and its most relevant limitations. The text concludes that, a decade after that emblematic year, the question is about the impact of that Law, in particular about its faculty to constitute a medium with sufficient potential and suitability to act as the CID of Mexico a mechanism capable of serving its purposes.
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