Saturday, September 13, 2008
Kinda Fun
The University of San Diego has a lot of entertaining maps of Mexico, which measure things like percentage of the population working 35 hours or more, drug killings, changes in unemployment, per capita income, and population density. The cool thing is that the maps take into account differences from state to state, so you can measure the sharply divergent development in, say, Baja California and Guerrero. I found this on someone else's site maybe a week ago, and now I can't remember whose it was, so I am unable to give credit where it is quite plainly due. Sorry.
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