Source: Mexico Cities [Map]. (2010). Retrieved from World Book Online Reference Center.
My particular interest in Mexico stems from my college experience, when I had an opportunity during my senior year to live and work for a semester in the central part of the country. The first six weeks were spent in Cuernavaca, living with a host family and attending language classes at Universal, http://www.universal-spanish.com/home.htm. The rest of the semester I lived in the village of Vicente Guerrero (http://www.traveljournals.net/explore/mexico/map/p6283177/vicente_guerrero.html), a community of about 600 people in the state of Tlaxcala. My internship was originally intended to focus on sustainable agriculture practices, but due to gender barriers I found myself involved with a group of women who were visiting other communities and teaching other women about health and traditional medicines. At the time I lived there (1995), the telecommunication infrastructure consisted of a single telephone in the village, and most people got their news through the radio. In Cuernavaca, the language school director’s office computer had internet access and an email account, but the primary mode of communication back to the US was via telephone and fax.
I look forward to investigating how information infrastructure has developed and progressed over the past 15 years, and what the major influences on that development have been.

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