925 resultados para Local-regional space
Resumo:
Este artículo indaga sobre el sistema de representación que operaba entre las organizaciones de distintos niveles -local, zonal y provincial- que conformaron el Movimiento Campesino de Santiago del Estero en el período 1990-2001. Se analiza, a través de un estudio de caso, el sistema de selección, formación y reemplazo de dirigentes en una organización local, desde la perspectiva de los involucrados. Se concluye que el sistema se basa en una norma fundamental que consiste en que los representantes "representen y no manden". Que "representen", porque se espera que sean portavoces, que transmitan las decisiones y consultas de un nivel organizativo al otro lo más fielmente posible a "las bases", a las familias miembros de la Comisión. Y que "no manden", es decir, que ese cargo de representante no implique un diferencial de poder sobre las otras familias. El sistema de rotación de representantes que sostienen para que esta norma de "representar y no mandar" se cumpla, presenta el desafío de capacitar nuevos representantes y de darle continuidad a la función de representación. Este sistema, que lleva a que los representantes no sean especialistas en la representación, impone restricciones al trabajo en el predio que comienza a generar tensión entre el compromiso con la organización y con el propio predio -y la familia- cuya resolución es incierta, y merece ser analizada en investigaciones futuras.
Resumo:
El objetivo de este trabajo es estudiar las transformaciones económicas y sociales que se producen en la localidad de Cachi, un departamento de la Provincia de Salta, Argentina, a fines del siglo XIX. Para tal fin, se investiga la estructura agraria de la localidad, enfatizando en la tenencia de la tierra, la mano de obra, la producción y el mercado. Si bien es un trabajo de Historia local, se incorpora también análisis de Historia regional, lo cual permite determinar cómo se incorpora la localidad al espacio regional que se forma a fines del siglo XIX, la región andina meridional. De este modo, se estudian los cambios y permanencias en la producción y tenencia de la tierra, la aparición de nuevas formas de producción de la tierra y la situación de los campesinos.
Resumo:
El siguiente artículo estudia la historia económica salteña entre 1850 y 1875. El trabajo estudia las características del comercio regional, la producción agropecuaria y la distribución demográfica a través del análisis del Registro Estadístico de la Provincia de Salta y el Censo Provincial, ambos de 1865. En segundo lugar, estudia la distribución de la tierra en la campaña de la capital a partir del análisis del Catastro Territorial de 1856 y el Catastro Reformado de 1876, con el propósito de identificar las bases materiales que controló la elite económica local. Por último, se presenta una síntesis de la distribución de la tierra en las otras regiones que se conformaron en la provincia, a partir del análisis de los catastros departamentales de 1872
Resumo:
Este artículo indaga sobre el sistema de representación que operaba entre las organizaciones de distintos niveles -local, zonal y provincial- que conformaron el Movimiento Campesino de Santiago del Estero en el período 1990-2001. Se analiza, a través de un estudio de caso, el sistema de selección, formación y reemplazo de dirigentes en una organización local, desde la perspectiva de los involucrados. Se concluye que el sistema se basa en una norma fundamental que consiste en que los representantes "representen y no manden". Que "representen", porque se espera que sean portavoces, que transmitan las decisiones y consultas de un nivel organizativo al otro lo más fielmente posible a "las bases", a las familias miembros de la Comisión. Y que "no manden", es decir, que ese cargo de representante no implique un diferencial de poder sobre las otras familias. El sistema de rotación de representantes que sostienen para que esta norma de "representar y no mandar" se cumpla, presenta el desafío de capacitar nuevos representantes y de darle continuidad a la función de representación. Este sistema, que lleva a que los representantes no sean especialistas en la representación, impone restricciones al trabajo en el predio que comienza a generar tensión entre el compromiso con la organización y con el propio predio -y la familia- cuya resolución es incierta, y merece ser analizada en investigaciones futuras.
Resumo:
El objetivo de este trabajo es estudiar las transformaciones económicas y sociales que se producen en la localidad de Cachi, un departamento de la Provincia de Salta, Argentina, a fines del siglo XIX. Para tal fin, se investiga la estructura agraria de la localidad, enfatizando en la tenencia de la tierra, la mano de obra, la producción y el mercado. Si bien es un trabajo de Historia local, se incorpora también análisis de Historia regional, lo cual permite determinar cómo se incorpora la localidad al espacio regional que se forma a fines del siglo XIX, la región andina meridional. De este modo, se estudian los cambios y permanencias en la producción y tenencia de la tierra, la aparición de nuevas formas de producción de la tierra y la situación de los campesinos.
Resumo:
El siguiente artículo estudia la historia económica salteña entre 1850 y 1875. El trabajo estudia las características del comercio regional, la producción agropecuaria y la distribución demográfica a través del análisis del Registro Estadístico de la Provincia de Salta y el Censo Provincial, ambos de 1865. En segundo lugar, estudia la distribución de la tierra en la campaña de la capital a partir del análisis del Catastro Territorial de 1856 y el Catastro Reformado de 1876, con el propósito de identificar las bases materiales que controló la elite económica local. Por último, se presenta una síntesis de la distribución de la tierra en las otras regiones que se conformaron en la provincia, a partir del análisis de los catastros departamentales de 1872
Resumo:
Este artículo indaga sobre el sistema de representación que operaba entre las organizaciones de distintos niveles -local, zonal y provincial- que conformaron el Movimiento Campesino de Santiago del Estero en el período 1990-2001. Se analiza, a través de un estudio de caso, el sistema de selección, formación y reemplazo de dirigentes en una organización local, desde la perspectiva de los involucrados. Se concluye que el sistema se basa en una norma fundamental que consiste en que los representantes "representen y no manden". Que "representen", porque se espera que sean portavoces, que transmitan las decisiones y consultas de un nivel organizativo al otro lo más fielmente posible a "las bases", a las familias miembros de la Comisión. Y que "no manden", es decir, que ese cargo de representante no implique un diferencial de poder sobre las otras familias. El sistema de rotación de representantes que sostienen para que esta norma de "representar y no mandar" se cumpla, presenta el desafío de capacitar nuevos representantes y de darle continuidad a la función de representación. Este sistema, que lleva a que los representantes no sean especialistas en la representación, impone restricciones al trabajo en el predio que comienza a generar tensión entre el compromiso con la organización y con el propio predio -y la familia- cuya resolución es incierta, y merece ser analizada en investigaciones futuras.
Resumo:
The purpose of this article is to examine the value accruing to a regional area in Australia from the location of an undergraduate Japanese language education program in a university in that area. The focus is on the manner in which the inclusion of such a program enhances the sustainability of the area. Sustainability is here defined as the resilience demonstrated by social subjects in the absence of the full range of services available in more densely populated and resource advantaged areas. Such resilience implies an ongoing capacity on the part of subjects to contribute productively to social and economic networks in the area. The discussion includes two cases of graduates of the program under review. On the basis of these cases, the argument is advanced that local regional and rural area access to a tertiary sector second language program offers a unique and valuable strategic dimension to the personal and professional development of social agents in regional areas and to the sustainability of these areas generally.
Resumo:
Since the Second World War, Australian governments have adopted various approaches to governing nonmetropolitan Australia. The authors profile three distinct approaches to governance characterised as (1) state-centred regionalism; (2) new localism; and (3) new forms of multifaceted regionalism. Although recent policy initiatives have been justified by the argument that the region is the most suitable scale for planning and development in nonmetropolitan Australia, in practice the institutional landscape is a hybrid of overlapping local, regional, and national scales of action. The authors compare this new, multifaceted, regionalism with the so-called 'new regionalism currently being promoted in Western Europe and North America. It is argued that new regionalism differs in quite important ways from the regionalism currently being fostered in Australia. In Australia, the centrality of sustainability principles, and the attempt to foster interdependence amongst stakeholders from the state, market, and civil society, have produced a layer of networked governance that is different from that overseas. It is argued that there is a triple bottom-line 'promise' in the Australian approach which differs from the Western Europe/North American model, and which has the potential to deliver enhanced economic, social, and environmental outcomes.
Resumo:
Regional tourism organizations (RTOs) plays a central role in planning, coordinating and marketing tourism in many areas, including Queensland, Australia. RTOs rely on interaction with a network of other organizations for their efficient functioning. This paper describes an exploratory case study that develops a method for use of social network analysis techniques to analyse the inter-organizational network in one RTO region in Queensland. Results indicate that differences exist in the structure of inter-organizational links between commercial tourism organizations and planning organizations, between tourism organizations and other sectoral clusters, and between organizations at local, regional and state levels. The results highlight areas or improvement in the role and responsibilities of RTOs in Queensland.
"New" Social Movements: Alternative Modernities, (Trans)local Nationalisms, and Solidarity Economies
Resumo:
My dissertation is the first project on the Haitian Platform for Advocacy for an Alternative Development- PAPDA, a nation-building coalition founded by activists from varying sectors to coordinate one comprehensive nationalist movement against what they are calling an Occupation. My work not only provides information on this under-theorized popular movement but also situates it within the broader literature on the postcolonial nation-state as well as Latin American and Caribbean social movements. The dissertation analyzes the contentious relationship between local and global discourses and practices of citizenship. Furthermore, the research draws on transnational feminist theory to underline the scattered hegemonies that intersect to produce varied spaces and practices of sovereignty within the Haitian postcolonial nation-state. The dissertation highlights how race and class, gender and sexuality, education and language, and religion have been imagined and co-constituted by Haitian social movements in constructing ‘new’ collective identities that collapse the private and the public, the rural and the urban, the traditional and the modern. My project complements the scholarship on social movements and the postcolonial nation-state and pushes it forward by emphasizing its spatial dimensions. Moreover, the dissertation de-centers the state to underline the movement of capital, goods, resources, and populations that shape the postcolonial experience. I re-define the postcolonial nation-state as a network of local, regional, international, and transnational arrangements between different political agents, including social movement actors. To conduct this interdisciplinary research project, I employed ethnographic methods, discourse and textual analysis, as well as basic mapping and statistical descriptions in order to present a historically-rooted interpretation of individual and organizational negotiations for community-based autonomy and regional development.
Resumo:
This paper discusses the importance of space in today’s space driven world, the current space activities of Turkey, its space organizations with legislation background information and calls for the necessity for the establishment of the Turkish Space Agency (TSA). Firstly, the importance of space is given which is followed by a brief background and current space activities in Turkey. Then, the answers to why Turkey needs a National Space Agency are outlined by stating its expected role and duties. Additionally, the framework for space policy for Turkey is proposed and the findings are compared with other developing regional space actors. Lastly, it is proposed and demonstrated that Turkey is on the right track with its space policy and it is suggested that the establishment of the TSA is critical both for a coherent space policy and progress as well as the successful development of its national space industry, security and international space relations.
Resumo:
This thesis is an examination of the ASEAN’s prospects in establishing regional competition policy in the Southeast Asia region, a topic of contemporary relevance in light of the ASEAN’s recent foray into the economic integration field on 31 December 2015. It questions whether the current approach undertaken by the ASEAN could contribute to an effective regional competition policy under the regional market integration. In answering this question, the thesis first critically surveys the current terrain of regional competition laws and policies in order to determine the possible existence of an optimal template. It argues that although the EU model is oft used as a source of inspiration, each regional organisation conceives different configurations of the model in order to best adjust to the local regional contexts. The thesis makes an inquiry into the narratives of the ASEAN’s competition policy, as well as the ASEAN’s specific considerations in the development of competition policy, before comparing the findings to the actual approaches taken by the ASEAN in its pursuit of regional competition policy. This thesis reveals that the actual approach taken by the ASEAN demonstrates an important discrepancy from the economic integration goal. The ASEAN applies a soft harmonisation approach regarding substantive competition law while refraining from establishing a centralised institution or a representative institution. The sole organ with regards to competition policy at the regional level is an expert organ. The thesis also conducts an investigation into the reception of the ASEAN’s regional policy by the member states in order to ascertain the possibility of the achievement of the ASEAN’s aspiration of regional competition policy. The study reveals that despite some shared similarities in the broad principles of competition law amongst the member states, the various competition law regimes are not harmonised thus creating challenging obstacle to the ASEAN’s ambition. The thesis then concludes that the ASEAN’s approach to regional competition law is unlikely to be effective.
Resumo:
My dissertation is the first project on the Haitian Platform for Advocacy for an Alternative Development- PAPDA, a nation-building coalition founded by activists from varying sectors to coordinate one comprehensive nationalist movement against what they are calling an Occupation. My work not only provides information on this under-theorized popular movement but also situates it within the broader literature on the postcolonial nation-state as well as Latin American and Caribbean social movements. The dissertation analyzes the contentious relationship between local and global discourses and practices of citizenship. Furthermore, the research draws on transnational feminist theory to underline the scattered hegemonies that intersect to produce varied spaces and practices of sovereignty within the Haitian postcolonial nation-state. The dissertation highlights how race and class, gender and sexuality, education and language, and religion have been imagined and co-constituted by Haitian social movements in constructing ‘new’ collective identities that collapse the private and the public, the rural and the urban, the traditional and the modern. My project complements the scholarship on social movements and the postcolonial nation-state and pushes it forward by emphasizing its spatial dimensions. Moreover, the dissertation de-centers the state to underline the movement of capital, goods, resources, and populations that shape the postcolonial experience. I re-define the postcolonial nation-state as a network of local, regional, international, and transnational arrangements between different political agents, including social movement actors. To conduct this interdisciplinary research project, I employed ethnographic methods, discourse and textual analysis, as well as basic mapping and statistical descriptions in order to present a historically-rooted interpretation of individual and organizational negotiations for community-based autonomy and regional development. ^
Resumo:
This thesis presents research into the space use of a specialist reedbed Passerine, the Bearded Reedling, or Bearded Tit, Panurus biarmicus, with a view to inform the conservation of this species and reedbeds as a whole. How a species uses space, and how space use changes between individuals or over time, can influence: the ability to forage and hunt effectively, breeding success, susceptibility to predation, genetic health, disease spread, robustness against environmental change and ultimately, colonisation or extinction. Thus, understanding the space use of animals can provide critical insight into ecological systems. Birds offer interesting models when studying animal space use, as, by being intrinsically mobile, many bird species can occupy multiple spatial scales. As a consequence of being completely dependent on patchy and ephemeral reedbed habitats, the Bearded Reedling, has a clustered, inhomogeneous distribution throughout its range. This drives the existence of distinct spatial scales upon which space use studies should be characterised. Distribution and movement within a single reedbed can be considered local-scale, while spatial processes between reedbeds can be considered wide-scale. Temporal processes may act upon both of these scales. For example, changing interactions with predators may influence nest positioning at a local-scale, while seasonal changes in resource requirements might drive processes such as migration at a wide-scale. The Bearded Reedling has a wide temperate breeding range, extending over much of Eurasia. On the IUCN’s red list, it is listed as ‘of least concern’, with an estimated European population between 240,000-480,000 breeding pairs. Despite its relatively favourable conservation status, its dependence on reedbed habitats drives a fragmented distribution, with populations being concentrated in small, isolated, stands. Over the last century reedbed wetlands have suffered rapid declines caused by drainage schemes undertaken to improve land for development or agriculture. Additionally, many remaining reed stands are subject to extensive commercial management to produce thatch or biofuel. Conversely, in other areas, management is driven by conservation motives which recognise the present threats to reedbeds, and aim to encourage the diversity of species associated with these habitats. As the Bearded Reedling is fundamentally linked to the quality and structure of a reed stand, understanding the space use of this species will offer information for the direct conservation of this specialist species, and for the effects of reedbed management as a whole. This thesis first presents studies of space use at a local-scale. All local-scale research is conducted at the Tay Reedbeds in eastern Scotland. Mist netting and bird ringing data are used within capture recapture models, which include an explicit spatial component, to gain insight into the abundance of the Bearded Reedling on the Tay. This abundance estimation approach suggests the Tay reedbeds are a stronghold for this species on the British Isles, and that, as a high latitude site, the Tay may have importance for range expansion. A combination of transect surveys and radio-tracking data are then used to establish the local-scale space use of this species during the breeding and autumnal seasons. These data are related to changes in the structure of reed caused by local management in the form of mosaic winter reed cutting. Results suggest that birds exploit young and cut patches of reed as foraging resources when they are available, and that old, unmanaged reed is critical for nesting and winter foraging. Further local-scale studies concern the spatial patterns in the nesting habits of this species. Mosaic reed cutting creates clear edges in a reedbed. Artificial nests placed in the Tay Reedbeds demonstrate increased nest predation rates closer to the edges of cut patches. Additionally, high predation rates become reduced as the cut reed re-grows, suggesting that reed cutting may increase accessibility of the stand to predators. As Bearded Reedling nests are uncommon and difficult to locate, the timing, site selection and structure of a sample of real nests from the Tay is then detailed. These demonstrate an early, and relatively rigid breeding onset in this species, the importance of dense, compacted reeds as nesting sites and a degree of flexibility in nest structure. Conservation efforts will also benefit from studies into wide-scale spatial processes. These may be important when establishing how colonisation events occur and when predicting the effects of climatic change. The Bearded Reedling has been traditionally considered a resident species which only occasionally undertakes wide-scale, between-reedbed, movements. Indeed, the ecology of this species suggests strict year round local residency to reedbeds, with distinct seasonal changes in diet allowing occupation of these habitats year round. The European ringing recoveries of this species, since the 1970s are investigated to better characterise the wider movements of specialist resident. These suggest residency in southern populations, but higher instances of movement than expected in more northerly regions. In these regions wide-scale movement patterns resemble those of partial regular migratory species. An understanding of local and wide-scale spatial processes can offer a strong foundation on which to build conservation strategies. This thesis aims to use studies of space use to provide this foundation for the Bearded Reedling and offer further insight into the ecology of reedbed habitats as a whole. The thesis concludes by proposing an effective strategy for the conservation management of reedbeds that will especially benefit the Bearded Reedling.