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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.
31

Developing a church planting institute among the middle class population segment of Mexico City

Horn, Darrell Leon. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2003. / Appendix A, Workshop one training manual in Spanish. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 460-464).
32

Housing access and governance : the case of densification efforts in Mexico City, 2001-2012

Reyes Ruiz Del Cueto, Laura Alejandra 02 December 2013 (has links)
Lack of access to adequate housing in Mexico City's urban core and sprawling settlement patterns have led to numerous social and environmental issues. Current development patterns sharpen social fragmentation and segregation, create imbalances in the provision of infrastructure and services, and encourage human occupation of high-risk and environmentally susceptible areas. Furthermore, expansive urbanization has become increasingly expensive, both at the individual and collective level. This has happened because private interests often overshadow public ones; economic growth rather than equitable and sustainable development has been the mark of success. Thus, commercial uses have displaced residential uses, particularly low-income housing, to remote areas of the metropolitan region. Local government efforts, albeit significant in comparison to other parts of the country, have been unable to adequately address this issue. Government inefficiency, lack of inter-institutional coordination, corruption, and lack of resources, among other factors, have hindered the success of housing and densification projects. The present research evaluates recent densification efforts and their goals to increase housing access and repopulate the urban core. Some of the individual benefits enjoyed by residents of densification projects, such as access to infrastructure and services, as well as some of the difficulties experienced by them in the process of obtaining government credits and access to housing are also identified. The conclusion is that only the rigorous integration of environmental and social planning agendas and the renegotiation of concepts of spatial justice will lead to more effective policies and housing programs, and a just, accessible, and sustainable city, region and country. / text
33

Dynamics of ritual and ceremony at the metropolitan cathedral of Mexico, 1700-1750

Ramos Kittrell, Jesús Alejandro 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
34

The Rabi­ Yehuda Halevy: The Physical and Conceptual Space of a Sephardic Synagogue in Mexico City

DiSimone, Cori Beth January 2007 (has links)
This thesis analyzes Rabi­ Yehuda Halevy synagogue, which Victor Babani designed and Francisco Canovas built from 1941 to 1942 in the Colonia Roma Sur of Mexico City. I focus on its formal characteristics, as well as its socio-historical context. I examine late-nineteenth century to mid-twentieth century life for Sephardic Jews in Mexico: their cause for immigration, experience in their new homeland, and relations with other Jewish groups and non-Jews in the city. I explore the use of style and iconography in the synagogue in relation to the history and prior employment of these architectural features. Defining "style" in the Rabi­ Yehuda Halevy demands an understanding of the employment of a particular formal language in the design of minority groups' architecture. The process of finding a style to portray national identity in Mexico was parallel to the Mexican Sephardim's use of architecture to articulate their own identity in the city.
35

Trading with Power: Mexico City's Markets, 1867-1958

Bleynat, Ingrid January 2013 (has links)
This dissertation traces the history of Mexico City’s municipal markets from a patchwork of sites of customary trade dating from the colonial era to a network of state-controlled modernist halls in the 1950s. It shows how, as small-scale vendors of tomatoes, straw hats, charcoal and all manner of every-day necessities plied their trade and fought to protect their livelihoods, their interactions with the government and other social groups and classes transformed the city’s markets and shaped the contours of popular politics in modern Mexico. More broadly, it uncovers vendors’ role in the dual process of economic development and state formation. / History
36

From Manuscript to Performance: A Critical Edition of Ignacio de Jerusalem's Los Maitines de Nuestra Senora de la Concepcion (1768).

Blodget, Sherrill Bigelow Lee January 2008 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to make Ignacio de Jerusalem's Los Maitines de Nuestra Senora de la Concepcion (The Matins for Our Lady of the Conception), composed in 1768 for the Mexico City Cathedral, accessible to modern choral and orchestral ensembles through the creation of a historically informed edition of the work that incorporates the latest scholarship on editorial and performing practices of the Mexican Baroque. Jerusalem's manuscript is housed in the Mexico City Cathedral archive and on microfilm in the Biblioteca Nacional de Antropologia e Historia of Mexico, D.F. The Matins has not been performed since the nineteenth century, and never outside of Mexico, nor has it been the subject of scholarly research. Set for choir and chamber orchestra with arias, recitatives, and choral movements, the work represents the most elaborate of Jerusalem's compositions. This document provides background information and a discussion of performance practice and editorial protocol based on research and the performance of the Invitatory and First Nocturn of The Matins by the University of Arizona Collegium Musicum. The document culminates with a performance edition of the Invitatory and First Nocturn of Los Maitines de Nuestra Senora de la Concepcion.
37

Gladiolas for the Children of Sanchez: Ernesto P. Uruchurtu's Mexico City, 1950-1968

Villarreal, Rachel Kram January 2008 (has links)
This dissertation examines the moralization and beautification campaigns of Mexico City's mayor Ernesto P. Uruchurtu. As head of the Department of the Federal District from 1952-1966, his policies encouraged more popular housing, improved infrastructure, better transportation, cleaner markets, and safer streets. Uruchurtu also aimed to crack down on vice and beautify the city. He believed that through beautification and moralization the city would become safer, healthier, and more livable for all residents. Significantly, he promoted the expansion and improvement of parks, gardens, recreational facilities, the repairing and building of fountains, and the planting of trees and flowers, especially gladiolas. Living with more green and athletic spaces, urban dwellers would have the opportunity to improve physically and spiritually, and would feel inspired to lead more moral lives. Residents could then collectively come together to take pride in their city and generate a stronger sense of civic culture. Consequently, a new generation of youth would grow up in a healthier urban environment and promote national prosperity.This dissertation explores these policies and analyzes the debates surrounding Oscar Lewis's anthropological work, The Children of Sanchez, to highlight anxieties about the effects of urbanization, modernization, and industrialization on the capital's inhabitants. Following the book's publication in 1964, hundreds of articles appeared in newspapers and magazines responding to its subject matter; the intimate details about life for one "typical" poor family living in a slum tenement in the city's center. The debates underscored the uneven benefits of Uruchurtu's policies and offered insights into contradictory depictions of Mexico City: the prospering center of industrialization and growth, and the hub of poverty and despair. Responses to the book expressed how many of the poor experienced economic and political changes during the 1950s and 1960s. The debates also offered details about the cultural and social implications of Uruchurtu's administrative policies and provided a unique opportunity for an open public exchange about life in the capital.
38

The use of solar water heaters in Mexico City /

Ferrel-Mendieta, Minerva. January 1999 (has links)
During the last decade, Mexico City's air quality has deteriorated dramatically. Air pollution management has become a major issue, and a number of policies and campaigns aimed at reducing the volume of harmful emissions released into the atmosphere by vehicles and large-scale industries, have been implemented. / Lighting, office equipment, cooking, refrigeration, space heating, space cooling, ventilation, and water heating are the ultimate commercial uses of energy. The goal of this study is to determine if there is a potential market for solar water heaters that could provide hot water for a number of activities in the city, reducing the amount of fossil fuels burned for this purpose, thus contributing to decrease the amount of air pollutants to the atmosphere. / The results of this research show how a number of industries, public services and commercial activities need to be provided with both water and energy in large quantities, and are therefore potential users of solar thermal technologies.
39

Coatepec the Great Temple of the Aztecs : recreating a metaphorical state of dwelling /

Orduña, Santiago de. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.). / Written for the School of Architecture. Title from title page of PDF (viewed 2008/07/23). Includes bibliographical references.
40

The impacts of neoliberal reform on internal migration in Mexico a comparison between indigenous and non-indigenous migration /

Tsutsui, Hiroshi. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Ohio University, August, 2005. / Title from PDF t.p. Includes bibliographical references (p. 77-82)

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