883 resultados para Bible stories, Latin.
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Includes bibliography
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Includes bibliography
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Since the financial and economic crisis began to affect the real economy and spread throughout the world, the region’s economies have been faced with a situation where data on employment and labour reflect the real stories of millions of women and men for whom the future has become uncertain. When these problems began to appear, the International Labour Organization (ILO) warned that the world faced a global employment crisis whose consequences could lead to a social recession. As the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) has pointed out, the outbreak of the crisis put an end to a five-year period of sustained growth and falling unemployment. As early as the second half of 2008, the figures began to reflect slowing economic growth, while a downward slide began in the labour market. This initial bulletin, produced jointly by ECLAC and ILO, seeks to review the ways in which the crisis is affecting the region’s labour markets. Amidst a situation characterized by shocks and uncertainty, governments and social partners must have the inputs needed for designing public policies to increase the population’s levels of employment and well-being. It is planned to produce two further bulletins by January 2010, in order to measure the impact of the crisis on employment and provide an input to the process of defining the best public policies to reverse its consequences. The bulletin reviews the most recent available indicators and analyses them in order to establish trends and detect variations. It provides statistics for the first quarter, estimates for the rest of 2009, and a review of policies announced by the Governments. In 2008, the last year of the growth cycle, the region’s urban unemployment stood at 7.5%. According to economic growth forecasts for 2009, the average annual urban unemployment rate for the region will increase to between 8.7% and 9.1%; in other words, between 2.8 million and 3.9 million additional people will swell the ranks of the unemployed. Data for the first quarter of 2009 already confirm that the crisis is hitting employment in the region. Compared with the first quarter of 2008, the urban unemployment rate was up by 0.6 percentage points, representing over a million people.Work will continue until September 2009 on the preparation of a new report on the employment situation, using data updated to the first half of 2009. This will provide a picture of the region’s employment situation, so that growth and employment projections can be adjusted for 2009 as a whole. Strategies for dealing with the crisis must have jobs and income protection as their central goals. Policies are moving in that direction in Latin America and the Caribbean and, if they are effective, an even greater worsening of the situation may be avoided. Labour produces wealth, generates consumption, keeps economies functioning and is a key factor in seeking out the way to more sustainable and equitable growth once the crisis is past.
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Too Big to Ignore (TBTI; www.toobigtoignore.net) is a research network and knowledge mobilization partnership established to elevate the profile of small-scale fisheries (SSF), to argue against their marginalization in national and international policies, and to develop research and governance capacity to address global fisheries challenges. Network participants and partners are conducting global and comparative analyses, as well as in-depth studies of SSF in the context of local complexity and dynamics, along with a thorough examination of governance challenges, to encourage careful consideration of this sector in local, regional and global policy arenas. Comprising 15 partners and 62 researchers from 27 countries, TBTI conducts activities in five regions of the world. In Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) region, we are taking a participative approach to investigate and promote stewardship and self-governance in SSF, seeking best practices and success stories that could be replicated elsewhere. As well, the region will focus to promote sustainable livelihoods of coastal communities. Key activities include workshops and stakeholder meetings, facilitation of policy dialogue and networking, as well as assessing local capacity needs and training. Currently, LAC members are putting together publications that examine key issues concerning SSF in the region and best practices, with a first focus on ecosystem stewardship. Other planned deliverables include comparative analysis, a regional profile on the top research issues on SSF, and a synthesis of SSF knowledge in LAC
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This paper critically examines the liberation theology of José Porfirio Miranda, as expressed in his Marx and the Bible (1971), with a focus on the central idea (and subtitle) of this work: the “Critique of the Philosophy of Oppression.” Miranda’s critique is examined via certain key tropes such as “power,” “justice,” and “freedom,” both in the context of late twentieth-century Latin American society, and in the state of the “post-Christian” and “post-Marxist” world more generally, vis-à-vis contemporary liberal justice theory. Close examination of the potentialities, paradoxes and subtle evasions in Miranda’s critique leads not to the conclusion that Miranda does not go far enough in his application of Christian principles to justice theory.
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"This book is composed of three lectures, on the L.P. Stone foundation, delivered at Princeton theological seminary, on the third, fourth, and fifth of February, 1919."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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v.l. Stories of love and revenge. v. 2. Stories of heroism and romance. v. 3. Stories of humor and adventure. v. 4. The betrothed lovers. v. 5. v. 6. The Spanish rogue. v. 7. Pepito Jiménez and Marta and Maria. v. 8. Tales of today and Spanish-American stories..̐
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v. 6. The village convict, by C. H. White. The Denver express, by A. A. Hayes. The misfortunes of Bro' Thomas Wheatley, by Lina R. Fairfax. The heartbreak cameo, by L. W. Champney. Miss Eunice's glove, by A. Webster. Brother Sebastian's friendship, by H. Frederic.--v. 7. The bishop's vagabond, by Octave Thanet. Lost, by E. Bellamy. Kirby's coals of fire, by Louise Stockton. Passages from the journal of a social wreck, by Margaret Floyd. Stella Grayland, by J. T. McKay. The image of San Donato, by Virginia W. Johnson.--v. 8. The brigade commander, by J. W. De Forest. Split zephyr, by H. A. Beers. Zerviah Hope, by Elizabeth S. Phelps. The life-magnet, by A. A. Adee. Osgood's predicament, by Elizabeth D. B. Stoddard.--v. 9. Marse Chan, by T. N. Page. Mr. Bixby's Christmas visitor, by C. S. Gage. Eli, by C. H. White. Young Strong of "The Clarion," by Milicent W. Shinn. How old Wiggins wore ship, by Captain R. T. Coffin. "--mas has come," by L. Kip.--v. 10. Pancha, by T. A. Janvier. The ablest man in the world, by E. P. Mitchell. Young Moll's peevy, by C. A. Stephens. Manmat'ha, by C. De Kay. A daring fiction, by H. H. Boyesen. The story of two lives, by Julia Schayer.
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Appendix A (v. 2) comprises fragments of the dogmatic works of Theodore.
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Title page in Latin and English.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bibliography of the works of Daniel Waterland: p. 353-356.
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"This book is composed of three lectures, on the L. P. Stone foundation, delivered at Princeton theological seminary, on the third, fourth, and fifth of February, 1919."