How and why did the process of nation-state consolidation vary across the Americas?

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Market Vendors in MexicoWomen sell fruits and vegetables at a market in San Luis Potosí, Mexico, around 1910 (© ullstein — Haeckel-Archiv/The Image Works)

AAT THE MOMENT OF THEIR INDEPENDENCE , none of the nations of the Americas had consolidated what would become their national territory, and that process often took place violently. In countries such as Mexico and Argentina new governments failed to establish the trust needed for political stability. In the United States long-standing tensions and disagreements culminated in the Civil War, while in Cuba nationalists fought a long struggle for independence from Spain.