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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
721

El seguro de desempleo en el derecho sudamericano.

Gillmore Valenzuela, Ignacio, Vidal del Valle, Nicolás January 2004 (has links)
Memoria (licenciado en ciencias jurídicas y sociales) / Por esta razón, y desde una perspectiva estrictamente jurídica, hemos estimado procedente analizar las opciones por las que se han decidido diversos ordenamientos jurídicos dentro de Sudamérica, incluido el nuestro, analizarlos separadamente y luego en forma conjunta y transversal para poder extraer las conclusiones y sacar a la luz las bondades o errores de los sistemas adoptados. El método de estudio que proponemos, creemos permitirá comprender el desarrollo de la tradición jurídica y realidad social en que se insertan los distintos sistemas de Seguridad Social por Cesantía en Sudamérica, y que permitirán, en definitiva, comprender la adecuación, innovación, bondades o falencias del sistema chileno de Seguro de Desempleo implementado por la Ley N° 19.728, publicada el día 14 de Mayo de 2001, y cuya aplicación se está haciendo realidad sólo en el tiempo más reciente.
722

Gambling music of the coast Salish Indians

Stuart, Wendy Bross January 1972 (has links)
Slahal is a gambling game played by North American natives on the North Pacific coast. This activity is of particular interest to the ethnomusicologist because of the large body of songs which not only accompanies but also is intimately linked with it. The thesis which follows is a résumé of research done over the past two and one-half years and deals with the slahal songs of the Coast Salish. I begin with a description of the game itself the object of which is to guess the location of two tokens concealed in the hands of the opponents. We soon learn that gambling music, as one may say about music in general, has a certain power -- the ability to elevate the entire game experience into a different and more exciting realm than that of an ordinary game. The main bulk of the thesis is in the second part where I have presented 77 representative songs out of 194, transcribed from over twelve hours of music. Along with the songs are analyses and comments which are found in summary form in Part III. The concluding section touches upon the significance of slahal in present-day Indian culture. / Arts, Faculty of / Music, School of / Graduate
723

An Analysis of Factors in the Adoption or Non-Adoption of Videodisc Technology in North American Academic and Special Libraries

Kelley, Robert E. (Robert Emmett) 12 1900 (has links)
The researcher identified 37 independent variables to study their effect on the two dependent variables, the acquisition of videodiscs and the functions for which videodisc programs were acquired. The literature of the applications of videodisc technology in libraries, museums, education and industry, as well as related issues concerning interactive video, were presented in Chapter 2. Using the diffusion of innovation theory of Everett Rogers as a guide, the researcher constructed a questionnaire. Valid responses totaled 462 from management of all types of academic libraries and from special libraries other than non-academic law, military, veterans' hospital, and church libraries. The following conclusions were made from the results: there were significant correlations between having videodiscs and perceptions of greater benefits than costs, appropriateness of videodisc programs for libraries' objectives or curricula, seeing videodiscs as an enhancement of an existing library technology, collection of videocassettes, and ability to raise funds from slack resources. The size of the libraries' materials and equipment budgets had some significance, but it was not consistently significant, as it was for the above-mentioned factors, at the p < .01 level. Lack of in-house recording ability did not impose a barrier on adoption of discs among respondents. Full--motion, full-screen video was not seen as very important for future multimedia use.
724

Le processus révolutionnaire de changement social en situation de dépendance : une analyse historico-comparative de trois pays d'Amerique centrale, le El Salvador, le Guatémala et le Nicaragua

Gaudreau, Louis. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
725

The process of transforming human rights practices in Latin America : NGOs and their quest to develop international human rights norms

Baltodano Egner, Charlotte January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
726

The human rights of the child : the case of street children in Central America

Brom, Charlotte January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
727

The influence of the early culture of New Mexico on the contemporary fashions of that area /

Friesen, Maria Selma January 1961 (has links)
No description available.
728

Food, feasts, and the construction of identity and power in ancient Tiwanaku a bioarchaeological perspective /

Berryman, Carrie Anne January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D. in Anthropology)--Vanderbilt University, May 2010. / Title from title screen. Includes bibliographical references.
729

Intelligent Discontent, Agitation, and Progress: A Time-Series Analysis of National Revolts in Central America 1960-1982

David, J. Sky 08 1900 (has links)
Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua have all experienced significant social, economic, and political changes during the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Guatemala, El Salvador, and Nicaragua experienced violent national revolts, while Costa Rica and Honduras did not. I tested a process theory that endeavored to account for the origins and intensity of national revolts in Central America. The analysis was formulated in a most-similar-systems (MSS) design. Pooled cross-sectional time-series regression techniques were employed in order to conform with the MSS variation-finding strategy. The findings supported the conclusion that armed attacks against the state were not random occurrences, but rather, that they may have arisen in response to certain economic and political conditions.
730

Hunting by prehistoric horticulturalists in the American Southwest.

Szuter, Christine Rose. January 1989 (has links)
Hunting by horticulturalists in the Southwest examines the impact of horticulture on hunting behavior and animal exploitation among late Archaic and Hohokam Indians in south-central Arizona. A model incorporating ecological and ethnographic data discusses the impact horticulturalists had on the environment and the ways in which that impact affected other aspects of subsistence, specifically hunting behavior. The model is then evaluated using a regional faunal data base from Archaic and Hohokam sites. Five major patterns supporting the model are observed: (1) a reliance on small and medium-sized mammals as sources of animal protein, (2) the use of rodents as food, (3) the differential reliance on cottontails (Sylvilagus) and jack rabbits (Lepus) at Hohokam farmsteads versus villages, (4) the relative decrease in the exploitation of cottontails versus jack rabbits as a Hohokam site was occupied through time, and (5) the recovery contexts of artiodactyl remains, which indicate their ritual and tool use as well as for food.

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