Roads to Prosperity and Ruin: Infrastructure and the Making of Neoliberal Yucatán
In 2022, journalists announced the impending economic death of a small Mexican town. Pisté, gateway to the famed Chichén Itzá archaeological site, would be circumvented by the Tren Maya commuter rail megaproject and, consequently, deprived of the promise of steady tourist traffic. Instead of ruminating with frustration, locals set to work on negotiations with the state and federal governments. Generations of experience taught them that pragmatic engagement with mainstream political parties was essential in turning into opportunity projects with the potential to kill the local economy.

Fernando Armstrong-Fumero situates the Tren Maya in a long history of roadbuilding and economic development on the Yucatán Peninsula beginning in the 1930s. Drawing together archival research and decades of ethnographic work, Armstrong-Fumero develops the concept of negative infrastructure to show how infrastructural and industrial investments configure rural economic futures as well as how communities seek to mitigate the harms from projects designed to benefit other regions or interests. The push and pull of development reveals the strategies residents use to influence political change through municipal elections and informal protest. Recognizing their life-changing potential, rural Maya Yucatecans recast infrastructural projects as new possibilities for inclusion, agency, and resistance as participants in formal state and economic structures.
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Roads to Prosperity and Ruin: Infrastructure and the Making of Neoliberal Yucatán
In 2022, journalists announced the impending economic death of a small Mexican town. Pisté, gateway to the famed Chichén Itzá archaeological site, would be circumvented by the Tren Maya commuter rail megaproject and, consequently, deprived of the promise of steady tourist traffic. Instead of ruminating with frustration, locals set to work on negotiations with the state and federal governments. Generations of experience taught them that pragmatic engagement with mainstream political parties was essential in turning into opportunity projects with the potential to kill the local economy.

Fernando Armstrong-Fumero situates the Tren Maya in a long history of roadbuilding and economic development on the Yucatán Peninsula beginning in the 1930s. Drawing together archival research and decades of ethnographic work, Armstrong-Fumero develops the concept of negative infrastructure to show how infrastructural and industrial investments configure rural economic futures as well as how communities seek to mitigate the harms from projects designed to benefit other regions or interests. The push and pull of development reveals the strategies residents use to influence political change through municipal elections and informal protest. Recognizing their life-changing potential, rural Maya Yucatecans recast infrastructural projects as new possibilities for inclusion, agency, and resistance as participants in formal state and economic structures.
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Roads to Prosperity and Ruin: Infrastructure and the Making of Neoliberal Yucatán

Roads to Prosperity and Ruin: Infrastructure and the Making of Neoliberal Yucatán

by Fernando Armstrong-Fumero
Roads to Prosperity and Ruin: Infrastructure and the Making of Neoliberal Yucatán

Roads to Prosperity and Ruin: Infrastructure and the Making of Neoliberal Yucatán

by Fernando Armstrong-Fumero

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Overview

In 2022, journalists announced the impending economic death of a small Mexican town. Pisté, gateway to the famed Chichén Itzá archaeological site, would be circumvented by the Tren Maya commuter rail megaproject and, consequently, deprived of the promise of steady tourist traffic. Instead of ruminating with frustration, locals set to work on negotiations with the state and federal governments. Generations of experience taught them that pragmatic engagement with mainstream political parties was essential in turning into opportunity projects with the potential to kill the local economy.

Fernando Armstrong-Fumero situates the Tren Maya in a long history of roadbuilding and economic development on the Yucatán Peninsula beginning in the 1930s. Drawing together archival research and decades of ethnographic work, Armstrong-Fumero develops the concept of negative infrastructure to show how infrastructural and industrial investments configure rural economic futures as well as how communities seek to mitigate the harms from projects designed to benefit other regions or interests. The push and pull of development reveals the strategies residents use to influence political change through municipal elections and informal protest. Recognizing their life-changing potential, rural Maya Yucatecans recast infrastructural projects as new possibilities for inclusion, agency, and resistance as participants in formal state and economic structures.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781469691213
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 10/28/2025
Pages: 246
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Fernando Armstrong-Fumero is associate professor of anthropology at Smith College.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Timely and provocative. Armstrong-Fumero illuminates the territorial reconfigurations and political common sense that have shaped Indigenous struggles for political recognition over the past century.”—Bianet Castellanos, University of Minnesota

“Armstrong-Fumero’s ambitious work brings fresh insight to the theorization around roadbuilding in Mexico, allowing for a more nuanced appreciation of infrastructure.”—Michael K. Bess, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, Mexico

“Engaging, memorable, and fresh. Armstrong-Fumero highlights the nuances of a politics of prosperity and offers essential new insights about the politics of scale and desire.”—Eric Hirsch, author of Acts of Growth: Development and the Politics of Abundance in Peru

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