Secretariat of Agrarian Reform explained

Agency Name:Secretariat of Agrarian Reform
Nativename:Spanish; Castilian: Secretaría de la Reforma Agraria
Seal:SRA logo 2012.svg
Formed:1970
Dissolution 2013
Superseding:Secretariat of Agrarian, Land, and Urban Development
Jurisdiction:Federal government of Mexico
Employees:800 (2006)
Budget:US$387 million (2019)
Headquarters:Mexico City
Chief1 Name:Jorge Carlos Ramirez Martín
Chief1 Position:Secretary
Website:www.gob.mx/sra

The Mexican Secretariat of Agrarian Reform (Spanish: Secretaría de la Reforma Agraria, SRA) was a Secretariat in the cabinet of Mexico. It was created under the Organic Law of the Federal Public Administration, where Article 41 corresponds to the exercise of the functions and powers expressly stated in Article 27 of the Constitution of Mexico, which establishes the right of farm workers to own the land they work on.

By 2013, the Secretariat of Agrarian Reform was replaced by the Secretariat of Agrarian, Land, and Urban Development.

Organization chart

To carry out these functions, the Agrarian Reform Secretariat has the following units:

Decentralized administrative bodies and entities

To carry out these functions, the Secretariat has the following units:

List of secretaries of agrarian reform of Mexico