725 resultados para Chinese Canadians--Health and hygiene.
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"A further development and expansion of an earlier study [An experiment in the psychiatric treatment of promiscuous girls, by Ernest G. Lion, and others] sponsored by the same organizations reported in 1945."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"For a comparison of this survey with that made by the Office of Education in 1923, see A Biennium in hygiene and physical education, Bulletin, 1931, no. 20."--Foot-note, p. [1]
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"USCSC/OLMR-75/06."
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Advertisements: 16 p. of first group and 2 p. at end.
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Bibliography: p. 388-397.
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The maturation of the public sphere in Argentina during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was a critical element in the nation-building process and the overall development of the modern state. Within the context of this evolution, the discourse of disease generated intense debates that subsequently influenced policies that transformed the public spaces of Buenos Aires and facilitated state intervention within the private domains of the city’s inhabitants. Under the banner of hygiene and public health, municipal officials thus Europeanized the nation’s capital through the construction of parks and plazas and likewise utilized the press to garner support for the initiatives that would remedy the unsanitary conditions and practices of the city. Despite promises to the contrary, the improvements to the public spaces of Buenos Aires primarily benefited the porteño elite while the efforts to root out disease often targeted working-class neighborhoods. The model that reformed the public space of Buenos Aires, including its socially differentiated application of aesthetic order and public health policies, was ultimately employed throughout the Argentine Republic as the consolidated political elite rolled out its national program of material and social development.