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When Polenta Explodes
Protests, Poverty and Prosperity in Perspective 2012 started with a bang in Bucharest. The usually sedate Romanian capital erupted with protests the likes of which had not been seen for at least a decade. At first glance it seemed that people were angry with new healthcare legislation and the ousting of a […]
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Tratados comerciales con socios diferentes: la opción de Sudamérica
Abstract: Some Latin American countries are finally seeing certain economic stability. The expectations for the future of these countries are optimistic. Part of the success could be a strategy practiced by the most important economies in South America: trade agreements among themselves. Many of them share the interest of improving […]
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Estatalizar la industria: la respuesta boliviana a la falta de mercados libres
Abstract: Since the closing in 2008 of the Andean Trade Promotion and Drug Eradication Act, ATPDEA, Bolivia’s textile industry has fallen to pieces. The biggest company of them all, Ametex, was the most visibly affected, reducing exportations to less than a half and thereby leaving thousands of workers unemployed. […]
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Intelectual y madre: ¿discriminación en la academia?
Abstract: A few days ago, in an academic meeting, I was surprised to hear from a renowned anthropologist woman that she had rejected a postdoctoral candidate. The reason? The candidate had two children. What prevents a woman with children participating from academia?, I asked myself. That the academic world is […]
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Parto en casa: nacer no es una enfermedad
Abstract: For medicine, pregnancy is considered a disease and childbirth is part of a surgical protocol. The “clinicalization” of labor involves the intervention of a number of violent and invasive procedures that have been standardized. A process as natural as birth has become a totally unnatural event and manipulated, but […]