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Ejidos (at least, in Mexico)
The word ejido is used to describe communal land in Mexico. Mexico is a country located in North America, with an estimated population of 118,395,054.
Because they needed land
American Indians.
The Catholic church
Ejidos (at least, in Mexico)
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The Catholic Church owned the most land and controlled education in Latin America during the colonial period.
It comes from the Latin verb exitum (English: exit). It is a piece of land farmed communally.
The word ejido is used to describe communal land in Mexico. Mexico is a country located in North America, with an estimated population of 118,395,054.
Each ayllu in ancient Andean culture was owned collectively by its members, typically extended family groups. The land was communally managed and resources were shared among the community members. Ownership was based on kinship ties and shared responsibilities within the ayllu.
Because they needed land
During the colonial period, the majority of land in Latin America was owned by a small elite group of Spanish and Portuguese settlers, as well as the Catholic Church. Education was controlled by the colonial authorities and the Catholic Church, where education was often limited to elites and focused on religious instruction and maintaining social order.
The key demand of the Plan de Ayala was land reform, specifically the redistribution of land from large landowners (haciendas) to the peasants who worked the land. It called for the return of land to indigenous communities and for the establishment of ejidos (communally owned lands).
About half
American Indians.
The Catholic Church