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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.
1

Breve intento de analisis económico de Bolivia con especial atención al comercio internacional (intervencionismo o liberalismo)

Anaya Oblitas, Ivan G. January 1958 (has links)
Tesis (licenciatura en ciencias económicas)--Universidad Mayor de San Simón. / Bibliography: p. 179-[181].
2

Rebellion and the census of the Province of Cochabamba, 1730-1732 /

Hutchins, Patricia Cazier, January 1974 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 1974. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 564-571). Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center.
3

Del silencio y la guerra, o, La dificultad de nacer

Antezana Villegas, Mauricio, January 1988 (has links)
Thesis (master's)--UNAM, 1986. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 311-[325]).
4

Structural adjustment and the collapse of the Bolivian model of accumulation.

Monasterios Perez, Karin. January 1994 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Carleton University, 1994. / Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
5

A study of changing social attitudes in the American institutes of Bolivia ...

Beck, Bessie Dunn, January 1938 (has links)
Part of Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, 1935. / Lithoprinted. "Private edition, distributed by the University of Chicago Libraries, Chicago, Illinois."
6

An evaluation of camelid skeletal frequencies, patterning, deposition, and food utility at the site of Pirque Alto, Cochabamba, Bolivia

Green, Elizabeth Tremont. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.A)--State University of New York at Binghamton, Department of Anthropology, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references.
7

Wildfire under a changing climate in the Bolivian Chiquitania : a social-ecological systems analysis

Devisscher, Tahia January 2015 (has links)
With the same force that human activities accelerate and amplify change in the biosphere, human agency can play a critical role in influencing future trajectories. However, managing increasingly complex problems is becoming ever more challenging. Among other things, it requires a systemic thinking about the future to anticipate how intertwined drivers may respond to rapid change. This thesis addresses such challenge in the context of contemporary wildfires, which are becoming increasingly complex to manage and a growing global concern. The study adopted a novel approach (Chapter 3) to study wildfire as a complex social-ecological system. The overarching aim is to generate insights into wildfire causes, effects and feedbacks to anticipate future wildfire risk and inform management strategies that can prevent potential impacts. I combine different disciplinary lenses, multiple spatial scales of analysis and participatory methods to analyse wildfire dynamics in the Chiquitania region, located in the Department of Santa Cruz, Bolivia, at the southern edge of Amazonia. This region has a unique tropical dry forest that is susceptible to changes in climate and fire regimes, and a rapidly expanding agricultural frontier. During the recent 2010 drought, large wildfires affected this region intensifying public concern about potential 'mega-fires', particularly given predictions of more extreme seasonality in the future. The first research paper of this thesis (Chapter 4) evaluates the effects of wildfire recurrence on the forests of the Chiquitania using ecological surveys. In addition to significant biomass loss, the observed patterns in species abundance and dominance suggest that the forests respond to recurrent fires through a shift in tree species composition, with fire-tolerant species becoming more dominant. The second research paper (Chapter 5) analyses future wildfire risk in the Chiquitania region using fuzzy cognitive mapping. This conceptual modelling approach engaged different actor groups in the region to integrate their perspectives of the regional wildfire dynamics. Semi-structured interviews informed the scenario assumptions which considered failure to respond in time to wildfire risk, as well as implementation of alternative management strategies. Unexpectedly, the fire management strategy showed less trade-offs between wildfire risk reduction and production compared to the fire suppression strategy. The high vulnerability of the agricultural production to wildfire risk has implications for local communities that largely depend on agriculture for subsistence if future climatic conditions become drier. The third research chapter (Chapter 6) uses interviews and focus group discussions to analyse how different forms of knowledge and perceptions of fire relate to prevalent wildfire risk strategies in the Chiquitania. The analysis reveals that strategies are in tension between two conflicting narratives and understandings of fire. On this basis, a deliberation process is proposed with the potential to integrate opposing views into more inclusive and collective solutions to manage wildfire risk within a reflexive governance framework. The fourth research paper (Chapter 7) complements the above ground-based studies with a regional assessment of wildfire risk based on remotely sensed land cover, anthropogenic and climatic data. Maximum entropy was used as a probabilistic modelling approach to simulate future wildfire risk scenarios driven by different development trajectories, and assuming changing climatic conditions. Important determinants of wildfire risk were climate, road development, deforestation and density of human settlements. Positive feedbacks between rapid frontier expansion and drought conditions almost doubled potential biomass loss compared to estimates in the 2010 drought. Land used for agriculture and cattle ranching showed particularly high levels of wildfire risk, with serious implications for the subsistence and economy in the Chiquitania if the agricultural frontier is expanded at an accelerated rate. The combination of new findings and modelling tools developed in this thesis are relevant to inform wildfire risk management decisions in the Chiquitania. The timing is fitting as the regional government of Santa Cruz is developing a ten-year programme to address increased wildfire risk at the time of thesis submission, and the recently launched Regional Fire Platform promotes dialogue about possible solutions. More broadly, the approach to study wildfire as a social-ecological system has proven extremely useful to generate insights into different facets of a complex problem that is becoming a major concern in most of Amazonia and globally. This thesis generates important theoretical and practical contributions to the study of social-ecological systems, and provides a concrete example of how increasingly complex problems can be anticipated and managed under climate change and rapidly changing conditions with a more integrated and socially inclusive approach that can inform adaptation decisions for more sustainable futures.
8

Renaissance of the lost Leco : ethnohistory of the Bolivian foothills from Apolobamba to Larecaja

Ferrié, Francis January 2014 (has links)
The Leco from North of La Paz were considered to have disappeared by the end of the 20th century; however in 1997, two groups of Leco re-emerged independently from each other, one in Larecaja and one in Apolo. In the former the claim was less violent than in the latter, where Quechua peasants share language, culture and kinship, and refuse to recognize the land rights and the identity of their “Indigenous Leco” neighbours. The thesis aims to understand ethnohistorically both resurgences, and tries to go beyond essentialism to understand the heterogeneous melting pot from where the Apoleños come. Apolobamba, because it connects highlands and lowlands, received Andean influences (puquina, aymara and quechua) early on. Its inhabitants, the Chuncho of the Incas then the Spaniards, show hybrid ethnolinguistic and socio-cultural features. The ethnic diversity was reduced in the 18th century Franciscan Missions, where the ethnolinguistic border between an Andean South and the “savages” of the North was drawn at the Tuichi river. The liberal Republican period, with the construction of a national identity, once again shrank regional diversity and increased “Andeanization”. Apolistas and then Apoleños emerged from these interethnic mixes defined more geographically than ethnically. The Leco revival happens in an auspicious national and international context, but the Leco language was still spoken two or three generations ago on the Mapiri's banks. It raises the question of social transformation and continuity: are we dealing with a case of acculturation, ethnogenesis, camouflage or resistance?
9

Vývoj a potenciál obchodní spolupráce mezi Českou republikou a Bolívií / Development and Potential of Commercial Exchange between Czech Republic and Bolivia

Brach, Ondřej January 2011 (has links)
The Diploma Thesis analyses the development of commercial realtions between Czech Republic and Bolivia and evaluates a potential of mutual cooperation. The first part summarizes Czech and Bolivian economy and their srtengths, the offer and the demand and analyses the export situtation of both countries. In the other part of the Diploma thesis is presented the existing cooperation between both countries and their potential for the future. In the last part the author presents his own experience with the business in Bolivia in the field of tourism and imports to the Czech Republic.
10

Indigenous competition for control in Bolivia /

Schmidt, Richard J. January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A. in National Security Affairs)--Naval Postgraduate School, June 2005. / Thesis Advisor(s): Harold A. Trinkunas. Includes bibliographical references (p. 79-84). Also available online.

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