Showing 201 - 220 results of 313 for search '"Latin America"', query time: 0.03s Refine Results
  1. 201
  2. 202
  3. 203
  4. 204
  5. 205
  6. 206
  7. 207
  8. 208
  9. 209
  10. 210
  11. 211

    The economic empowerment of women in Colombia and Argentina: an analysis of human rights and public policy by Mora Cuervo, Ruth Astrid

    Published 2019
    “…The reduction of inequalities and gaps between men and women has been evident in recent decades, particularly since the recognition of women's human rights and the progress of the Regional Gender Agenda in Latin America. However, at the economic level there is still inequality of income and opportunities, derived from the lack of knowledge of the economic role they play. …”
    Online
  12. 212
  13. 213
  14. 214

    University Reforms in Central America: the influence of Rudolph Atcon by Murillo Lizardo, Orlando David, Soto Arango, Diana Elvira

    Published 2022
    “…Originality/contribution: It focuses on describing Atcon's technical proposal for the Honduran University and the Central America region, as a practical example of the promotion of the U.S. university model in Latin America and the Caribbean, especially in the 1960s and 1970s. …”
    Online
  15. 215

    Origin of the Lancasterian school in Colombia: historiography and purpose of implementation in the Cúcuta Constitution of 1821. by Acevedo Tarazona, Álvaro, Villamizar Palacios, Carlos

    Published 2024
    “…Method: The Lancasterian method promulgated in the Constitution of Villa del Rosario de Cúcuta, which was born as the most important milestone of compulsory schooling in Latin America, is analyzed in the light of the context of the Enlightenment and its republican political interpretation in the continent, by means of the review of published and documentary sources. …”
    Online
  16. 216

    Jesuit teaching in colonial Chile: Its schools, universities, and an approach to its methods and contents by Contreras Gutiérrez, Alejandra

    Published 2014
    “…As this topic has been so poorly addressed by the national contemporary historiography, our work is intended to make a contribution to the history of education in Chile and Latin America, in the sense that the Jesuit educational experience in Chile, was similar to that experienced in other nations of the continent.…”
    Online
  17. 217
  18. 218
  19. 219
  20. 220