Cancún, Mexico, serves as a vibrant free trade zone and a key player in Latin America's economic landscape, extending beyond its tourist appeal. The city is significant in the production of transnational capital and is a crucial element of the state's efforts to modernize rural, indigenous communities. Notably, over a third of Cancún's population consists of Maya migrants, highlighting the city's diverse cultural fabric and its role in shaping economic and social dynamics in the region.
M. Bianet Castellanos Libros


Introduction : indigenous Cancún -- Before housing reform : the gendering of urban property -- Promoting housing reform : debt as patrimony -- After housing reform : credit as the new frontier -- Foreclosure : waiting out the state -- Eviction : invoking indigenous resistance -- Epilogue : a cautionary tale of indebtedness.