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Four Confronting the Revolution (1911–1914)
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Published:August 2008
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Abstract
This chapter examines Emilio Rabasa's life and career from 1911 to 1914. Rabasa reached the peak of his career amidst the exceptional political turbulence of the period. With the publication of La Constitución y la dictadura and the founding soon after of the Escuela Libre de Derecho, Rabasa became recognized as perhaps the country's leading political historian, constitutional theorist, and legal educator. He was also an influential senator, later chosen to carry through an impossible but important diplomatic mission. At the same time, he became in 1911 a figure of the Old Regime, an increasingly antirevolutionary “científico” and a supporter of Victoriano Huerta, the “usurper.” Because of the moderation of the early Revolution, and because of his own nature—his determination to maintain a low political profile—Rabasa survived and even to some extent flourished amid the turmoil.
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