263 results
Search Results
2. Paper Works: Contested Resource Histories in Peru’s Huascarán National Park.
- Author
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Rasmussen, Mattias Borg
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CONSERVATION of natural resources , *TERRITORIALITY (Zoology) , *COMMUNITY organization ,PARQUE Nacional Huascaran (Peru) - Abstract
Summary Resource histories determine how particular parts of the environment come to be defined as valuable. As elsewhere, protected areas in Latin America link the governance of people, territory, and resources by reinterpreting and reclassifying practices and environments. Set in highland Peru, the article focuses on how such revisions imply contestation of both history and future. It explores particular modes of claiming space through an archeology of the claims to knowledge and legitimacy put forward by a national park and a campesino community, respectively. Claims to space entwine with social struggles about local development where territorial claims are based on different notions of history and interpretations of the esthetic and productive values of the landscape. While the park officials navigate interests of conservation, tourism, and extraction, the campesino community mobilizes a different set of values and interests based on their historical occupation of the territories. These processes of contestation over authority and legitimacy highlight different views on the role of landscapes in the history and progress of local communities. Conservation may not only dispossess people of their land and natural resources, but also of labor and territorial sovereignty. This case shows how an Andean campesino community counters such movements by a wide repertoire of legal and social actions that works simultaneously in legal and extra-legal domains. Paper works mediate claims to territorial sovereignty, people, and resources. These claims involve contestations over interpretations of history which, besides their oral forms, materialize in paperwork such as official communications, community records, and cadastral maps, as well as in visual representations, internal statutes, and deliberate history writing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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3. The Catholic Church in Fragile Democracies: An Influencer, a Moral Guide, or a Judge? A Case Study from the Peruvian Catholic Church.
- Author
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Piccone-Camere, Carlos and Lecaros, Véronique
- Subjects
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JUDGES , *RELIGIOUS institutions , *SERMON (Literary form) , *VALUES (Ethics) , *DEMOCRACY , *LIBERATION theology , *RELIGION & politics - Abstract
This paper navigates the complex roles that the Catholic Church assumes in fragile democracies, exploring whether it functions as an influencer, a moral guide, or a judge in shaping public policies and societal values using the Peruvian context as a focal reference. The authors begin by providing an overview of the global religious landscape, highlighting the diverse and polarized trends within the ecclesial institution. In the second part of this paper, this study delves into the homilies of two influential Peruvian prelates, Mgr. Cipriani and Mgr. Castillo, representing opposing theological currents within the Catholic Church, offering a pertinent exploration of how religious institutions engage with evolving international and local trends in the context of democracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. Mapping food system drivers of the double burden of malnutrition using community-based system dynamics: a case study in Peru.
- Author
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Quinteros-Reyes, Carmen, Seferidi, Paraskevi, Guzman-Abello, Laura, Millett, Christopher, Bernabé-Ortiz, Antonio, and Ballard, Ellis
- Subjects
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MALNUTRITION , *COMMUNITY-based participatory research , *FOOD quality , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: Peru is facing a double burden of malnutrition (DBM), characterized by the co-existence of undernutrition and overnutrition. Double-duty actions that concurrently target common drivers of undernutrition and overnutrition, while ensuring no unintended side effects, are recommended to effectively address the DBM. To understand these complex common mechanisms and design context-specific double-duty actions, there is a need for participatory systems approaches. This paper provides a case study of applying a community-based system dynamics approach to capture stakeholder perspectives of food system drivers of the DBM in two regions in Peru. Methods: We implemented a multi-stage community-based system dynamics approach, which included processes for research capacity building for systems approaches, and the designing, piloting, and implementation of stakeholder workshops. A total of 36 stakeholders, representing diverse perspectives, participated in five group model building workshops. Stakeholder views are presented in a causal loop diagram that showcases the feedback mechanisms between key food system drivers of overweight and stunting in Peru. Results: The causal loop diagram highlights that prioritization of undernutrition over overnutrition in the policymaking process, due to Peru's historically high levels of undernutrition, may undermine action against the DBM. It also describes potential mechanisms of unintended impacts of undernutrition policies on the DBM in Peru, including impacts related to within-family distribution and quality of food provided through food assistance programs, and unintended impacts due to regional dynamics. Conclusions: This paper highlights the importance of a participatory approach to understand local needs and priorities when recommending double-duty actions in Peru and shares practical methodological guidance on applying participatory systems approaches in public health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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5. First Nest Records of the Red-Throated Caracara (Ibycter americanus) in Peru.
- Author
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Rivas-Fuenzalida, Tomás, Burgos-Andrade, Katherine, and Angulo, Fernando
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RAIN forests , *AGRICULTURE , *BIRD nests , *INSECT societies , *SECONDARY forests , *NEST predation , *CROWNS (Botany) - Abstract
This article, published in the Journal of Raptor Research, describes the first nest records of the Red-Throated Caracara (Ibycter americanus) in Peru. The Red-Throated Caracara is a social forest raptor that preys on paper wasp colonies. The article provides details of two nests found in the Junín department of Peru, including their locations, characteristics, and observations of adult behavior. The study suggests that the species may exhibit some flexibility in nesting in human-altered forests. Further research is needed to understand the nesting habitat requirements and nest success of this poorly known caracara. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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6. Translation urgency in our climate-challenged times: co-producing geographical knowledge on El Niño in Peru.
- Author
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Laurie, N., Healy, G., Bell, I., Calle, O., Carmen, M., Cornejo, S., Davies, A., Mendo, T., Puescas, C., Schofield, V., Valdez, A., and White, R. M.
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DESERTS , *EDUCATIONAL innovations , *RESEARCH personnel , *CURRICULUM planning ,EL Nino - Abstract
This paper makes a case for revisiting the understandings of translation to enhance the co-production of geographical knowledge on climate change. Specifically, it offers insights about the potential role that schoolteachers and students can have as knowledge producers in relation to climate change by drawing on a case study of collaborative research on El Niño in Sechura, northern Peru. We call for researchers to pay greater attention to how co-production can be achieved through the integration of research agendas and practice with curricula development and innovation in school education. We contribute to work on how a generational shift in understanding about climate adaptation can be achieved through exploring communities' knowledge of the lesser-known opportunities of the El Niño phenomenon in northern desert regions. We conclude by arguing that revisiting how geography engages in and with translation is an urgent priority in climate-challenged times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. Righting Injustices Towards the Sámi: A Critical Perspective on the Norwegian Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
- Author
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Sønneland, Anne Margrethe and Lingaas, Carola
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TRUTH commissions , *SAMI (European people) , *CRITICAL analysis , *NORWEGIANS , *WATER use - Abstract
One of the mandates of the Norwegian Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) is to contribute to reconciliation between the majority population and the Sámi and Kven population. The Commission is tasked to create greater equality between the majority and minority populations as well as increasing the knowledge about the Sámi and Kven population in the majority. In this paper, we will focus on the Sámi indigenous people. We will examine three aspects: first, the assumption that the reconciliation should be between the majority population and the Sámi population rather than between the State and the population targeted by the Norwegianisation policies. Second, how such a reconciliation between the State and the Sámi is possible when there are ongoing conflicts over the use of land and water, exemplified by the Fosen windmill case. Finally, the TRC believes that a common understanding of the Norwegianisation policies and its consequences will lay the foundation for a continued reconciliation between the Sámi and the majority population. The paper discusses the involvement of the majority population in the process as well as the issues of public hearings and reparations. By means of an interdisciplinary examination of the Norwegian TRC, this paper presents sociological and legal perspectives. It draws on research from Latin American TRC s, particularly the Peruvian TRC, and thereby offers comparative perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Bilingual education and child labor: Lessons from Peru.
- Author
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Posso, Alberto
- Subjects
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CHILD labor , *BILINGUAL education , *EDUCATIONAL change , *CONDITIONAL cash transfer programs , *INDIGENOUS children , *RURAL children - Abstract
• The study focuses on the nexus between bilingual education and child labor. • Relationship between bilingual education and child labor is conceptually ambiguous. • Study exploits an education program for indigenous children in Peru. • It uses a difference-in-difference approach. • Bilingual education lowers child labor. This paper investigates the effect of bilingual education reform in Peru on child labor. The reform aimed to improve access to schooling for indigenous children in rural areas with greater integration of education providers and the delivery of lessons and material in vernacular indigenous languages. The core specifications use child-level panel data from the Young Lives Study and a two-way fixed effects difference-in-difference approach to test the causal effect of the program on child labor. The results show evidence to suggest that access to bilingual education has a negative and statistically significant effect on the extensive margin of child labor, with some specifications showing consistent results for its intensive margin counterpart. The preferred estimates are sizeable, with some specifications showing a decrease in the likelihood that an indigenous child enters child labor by between 12 and 18 percentage points. The findings are robust to several specifications including randomized inference techniques, synthetic difference-in-difference, and placebo tests. The paper also shows that concurrent policies, including Peru's conditional cash transfer program, are unlikely drivers of the core results. The paper's findings also suggest that the program resulted in greater inputs (i.e., time) into schooling and improved outcomes of education for indigenous children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. CARACTERíSTICAS DE LOS TRABAJOS PUBLICADOS SOBRE LAS PROPIEDADES DE LAS PLANTAS EN REVISTAS MÉDICAS PERUANAS.
- Author
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Pamo-Reyna, Oscar G.
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MEDICINAL plants , *MEDICAL botany , *USEFUL plants , *BIBLIOMETRICS - Abstract
Objective: To determine the characteristics of the original papers about the plants properties published in Peruvian medical journals. Material and methods. We reviewed the bibliographic databases of SciELO Peru and SISBIB for the period 2004-2008. Results. We found 825 original papers in 14 journals, but only 45 were included to the study. The number of the included original papers by year was 3 (2004), 5 (2005), 9 (2006), 13 (2007) y 15 (2008). The journals that published the highest rate of original papers about plants were journals from medical faculties Rev Med Vallejiana (33%), Horizonte Médico (29%) y An Fac Med (13%). The institutions that developed more studies were Universidad. Nacional Mayor de San Marcos (45,5%), Universidad de San Martín de Porres (22%) y Universidad Nacional de Trujillo (13%). from 226 authors, 11 were the most productive authors with the 22,1% of the total production. from 57 studied plants, the most investigated were Lepidium sp. (maca), Croton palanostigma (sangre de grado), Calophyllum brasiliense (lagarto caspi) and Smallanthus sonchifolius (yacón). The potential uses of the plants more researched were nutritional, antineoplastic, antioxidative, hypoglycemic and arterial hypotensive. There were only six (13,3%) clinical studies and the rest was experimental or biochemical. Conclusions. The published scientific medical production related to the plant properties is scanty but growing, mainly done in the public and private universities with almost null participation of the private enterprise. There is an elite of highly-producing authors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
10. Implementation of IAS 41 (Agriculture): The case of a Peruvian SME.
- Author
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Tanaka Nakasone, Gustavo and Castillo, Cielo
- Subjects
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SMALL business , *ACCOUNTING standards , *FINANCIAL statements , *FAIR value , *INDIVIDUAL investors , *INVESTMENT information , *ACCOUNTING firms - Abstract
The primary purpose of this paper is to present an actual case of a Peruvian SME which applied IFRS accounting standards – specifically, IAS 41 for consumable biological assets – to reflect its financial situation more accurately as an alternative to legal and tax regulations applying historical cost, which Peruvian SMEs more commonly use for the preparation of financial statements. Primary data were gathered through interviews and observation at the SME studied. This forestry-industry SME in question tried unsuccessfully to get financing from banks, even presenting complementary information regarding the calculation of biological asset values according to IAS 41. Failing this, it turned to seeking funding from private long-term investors, eventually succeeding in obtaining long-term financing from a new strategic investor. The significance of this paper is that it presents evidence of the advantages for companies (specifically agriculture-related companies) that comply with IFRS in a country where historical cost-based tax rules are traditionally applied for accounting purposes. Other SMEs can similarly improve the likelihood of obtaining new capital from potential investors by complementing the information provided in financial statements with detailed data regarding fair value calculation of biological assets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. International Collaboration Through Online Learning Between Students from Peru and India.
- Author
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Mlodzianowska, Sabina, Olivos Rossini, Mariella, and Singh Manhas, Parikshat
- Subjects
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ONLINE education , *EDUCATIONAL exchanges , *VIRTUAL work teams , *TRANSFORMATIVE learning , *STUDENT interests , *HOLISTIC education - Abstract
Although in the educational context the virtual exchange practices have become popular since pandemic, there is a need to examine and provide more evidences and lessons learned from this kind of international experiences in order to advance in teaching on line and to train students how to be efficient when working in virtual teams. This paper studies the results of a virtual collaboration among three universities in two different countries (Peru and India). It discusses the methodologies and pedagogies of Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) and global virtual team (GVT) and presents an instrument that was developed to understand student's needs and interests in several aspects (work in international teams, acquisition of intercultural knowledge and skills). A survey was applied to 77 students in Peru and India. The results showed the development of students' communication and collaboration skills as well as cross-cultural understanding and appreciation of other cultures. Despite the challenges that appeared during the project such as time difference, schedule, language barriers and engagement of some team members, students appreciated the opportunity to engage with peers from another country and to learn more about their culture. The COIL methodology, in contrast to GVT method, offers students more holistic and transformative learning experience supported and guided by lecturers. Trained faculty and awareness of COIL pedagogy characteristics and its implications are critical to a student's success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. Company or crowd? Termitomorpha kistneri sp. n., taxonomical rearrangement in termitophilous rove beetles and comparative notes in some Neotropical Termitogastrina (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Aleocharinae).
- Author
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Pires-Silva, Carlos M.
- Subjects
- *
STAPHYLINIDAE , *BEETLES , *CLASSIFICATION of insects , *TERMITES , *CROWDS - Abstract
Xenogaster Wasmann, 1891 is a Neotropical genus of termite-associated staphylinid beetles commonly found in nests of Nasutitermitinae termites. Due to morphological similarities and difficulties in their comparison, confusion often occurs among the species of Xenogaster and closely related genera such as Termitogaster Casey, 1889 and Termitomorpha Wasmann, 1894. The examination of the holotype of Xenogaster lineis Kistner, 2006, demonstrate that this specimen actually belongs to Termitogaster genus, leading to the proposal the transfer and new combination of this species, Termitogaster lineis (Kistner, 2006) comb. n. Additionally, examination of part of the paratypes of Xenogaster lineis revealed these specimens belong to a new species of the Termitomorpha genus, T. kistneri sp. n. here described. The results of these findings highlight the need of more taxonomic studies to resolve the ambiguity and imprecision in the diagnostic characters of closely related genera in Termitogastrina. This paper underscores the significance of revisiting and thoroughly re-examining type specimens and paratypes in order to ensure greater stability in the classification and nomenclature of insect taxa. To conclude, an updated key for Termitomorpha species and Neotropical Termitogastrina is also provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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13. Race And Politics In Peruvian And Argentine Porn Under The Transition To Democracy, 1975–1985.
- Author
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Insausti, Santiago Joaquín and Ben, Pablo
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RACE , *SQUATTER settlements , *PORNOGRAPHY , *MILITARY government , *DEMOCRACY - Abstract
This paper examines the articulation of race, class, gender, and politics in erotic magazines during the Argentine and Peruvian destapes in the transition from dictatorial to democratic rule at the turn to the 1980s. We argue that porn, as a genre, was not limited to a niche of readers seeking to use the magazines only for erotic purposes. In Peru, porn was one of the main agents in the opposition to military rule, and it only became a separate, autonomous genre devoid of politics with the coming of democracy. The emergence of magazines focused mostly on eroticism developed as editors attempted to lure readers among recent migrants from the Sierra who lived in the pueblos jóvenes (squatter settlements) in Lima. In this context, the audience demanded pictures of local women to replace foreign white female nudes. In Argentina porn became a crucial aspect of democratic politics, understood as a tool to overcome inhibitions, develop a self-exploration, and undermine traditional mores while fostering democracy. Driven by an impulse to emulate the alleged open-mindedness of Europe and the US, Argentine porn cemented white middle-class identity at a time of economic decline. In this context, Argentine erotic magazines praised sexual experimentation as courageous and gave voice to women, gays, and lesbians. Our approach combines social, political, and cultural history focusing on how the readership shaped magazines and at times achieved significant editorial changes. Through the study of porn we offer new insights regarding the transition to democracy in late Cold War Latin America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. Papeles Seductivos: Friars, Intermediaries, and Organizers in the Huánuco Rebellion of 1812.
- Author
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Cozzens, Taylor
- Subjects
- *
INSURGENCY , *LATIN American history , *SPANISH language - Abstract
In February and March of 1812, Indigenous, mestizo, and creole rebels led an uprising in and around the colonial city of Huánuco in the viceroyalty of Peru. The diversity of the insurgent army reflected, to an extent, the vision of bilingual friars who, in the months preceding the uprising, had written, translated, and distributed pasquinades that called on residents to unite and drive out the Spanish. Although the insurgent army had two initial victories, Spanish authorities quickly put down the movement and began an investigation into the motives and leaders of the rebellion. Their interrogations led them to the subversive friars and the " papeles seductivos " (seductive papers) that these men of the cloth had been circulating. Using a collection of digitized documents from the uprising, which includes several examples of these seditious verses, this paper examines the significance of the Huánuco Rebellion in Peruvian and Latin American history. The rebellion demonstrates the potential of friars in their role as mediators of information to destabilize colonial relations. Additionally, the diverse army of insurgents complicates, at least to a degree, historians' frequent characterization of Peru in the independence era as a bastion of royalism beset by ethnic tension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Sagittaria guayanensis Kunth (Alismataceae): nueva localidad regional en el sur del Perú.
- Author
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Galán de Mera, Antonio, Linares Perea, Eliana, and Montoya Quino, Juan
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PLANT communities , *AQUATIC plants - Abstract
This paper reports a new locality of Sagittaria guayanensis Kunth (Alismataceae) in southern Peru, providing data on its distribution and phytosociology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. Materiality and the politics of seeds in the global expansion of quinoa.
- Author
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Li, Fabiana
- Subjects
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QUINOA , *INCOME inequality , *FOOD crops , *BOTANISTS , *FOOD security , *SOCIAL scientists - Abstract
In recent years, quinoa (traditionally grown in South America) has been imagined as a food crop that addresses the world's most pressing problems: climate change, water scarcity, food insecurity, malnutrition, and economic inequality. Valued for being nutritionally exceptional and resistant to several agronomic stresses, quinoa has attracted the attention of consumers, researchers, and development agencies. This paper focuses on the World Quinoa Congress and other international gatherings of experts (plant scientists, quinoa farmers, social scientists, development practitioners, and entrepreneurs) who produce and share knowledge about quinoa's cultivation, production, consumption, and diversification. I examine how various actors materialize quinoa through different ways of conceptualizing seeds, property, and knowledge. In some cases, quinoa is part of a larger socioecological system, while in others, seeds are disembedded from their geographical context and studied in terms of their efficiency and yields. I explore the convergence and divergence of knowledges that accompany quinoa's globalization, shedding light on the frictions, conflicting priorities, opportunities, and questions that arise in spaces of knowledge creation and exchange. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. ECONOMIC ASPECTS OF QUINOA TRADE BETWEEN PERU AND THE EUROPEAN UNION.
- Author
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RUMANOVSKÁ, Ľubica, LAZÍKOVÁ, Jarmila, TAKÁČ, Ivan, SCHNEIR, Eric RENDÓN, and ISMAILOVA, Aygul
- Subjects
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QUINOA , *PRICES , *AMINO acids - Abstract
The paper points out the quinoa trade between Peru and the European Union regarding selected economic issues of quinoa production and prices in Peru and import into the EU. Quinoa is known as superfood due to the high level of protein, fibre, micronutrients, and all amino acids. This caused an increased interest in its consumption in the EU which resulted in rising prices. High quinoa prices have motivated farmers in different parts of the world to try producing quinoa that is traditionally home to areas in South America. The increase in the quantity of quinoa offered led to its fall in prices. Quinoa price volatility creates uncertainty for Peruvian farmers and traders, for whom quinoa is one of the main commodities. The article focuses on the development of quinoa production and prices in Peru, a country that is one of the main producers of quinoa in the world at a time when quinoa has become a popular superfood. During this period, imports of quinoa into the EU, which is a major trading partner of Peru in relation to the quinoa, also increased. Based on the assessed economic situation in the quinoa market between Peru and the EU, the authors of the article are looking for tools that could make it easier for Peruvian farmers to be successfully established in the EU market, despite the high interest in growing this commodity in different parts of the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
18. Cybernetic governance of the Peruvian State: a proposal.
- Author
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Rodriguez-Ulloa, Ricardo
- Subjects
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CYBERNETICS , *WATERSHEDS - Abstract
This paper aims to make a proposal to govern the Peruvian State under the umbrella of management cybernetics, following the paths of the viable system model (VSM), proposed by Prof. Stafford Beer, enriched with other soft and hard systemic methodologies and technologies, to cover the soft and hard issues that are part of the complex Peruvian reality at different levels of recursion. For doing this, four defined perspectives were adopted to understand the complexity of Peru: the sectoral view, the regions view, the river basins view and the macroregions view. Peru is seen as a system in focus, defining, for each of these four perspectives, the five systems that VSM has. The application of the VSM in each perspective serves to apply it in two modes: diagnosis and design, according to the respective perspective. Then an integrative analysis and reflection is done considering the four perspectives, to analyze the viability of the VSM approach in the governance of the Peruvian State to establish some conclusions and recommendations in relation to the proposal, appearing at the end of the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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19. New extractivism, foreign investment and inclusive development: reclaiming participatory gender equality in Perú.
- Author
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Valencia, Areli
- Subjects
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ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *FOREIGN investments , *POLITICAL participation , *GENDER inequality , *PARTICIPATION , *ENVIRONMENTAL management , *MINING law , *ENVIRONMENTAL law - Abstract
The paper evaluates the effectiveness of citizen participation in environmental management, specifically, in relation to the process of evaluation of environmental impact assessment studies of large-scale mining projects in Peru. It is analysed if these mechanisms are equally inclusive of female and male voices; identifies the barriers that women face in these deliberative spaces and assess what the government is doing to reduce gender based exclusions. The paper argues that, although according to Peruvian environmental and mining law, participatory spaces are aimed to include citizens' voices; they end up reinforcing domination and control as they mainly operate to facilitate a rapid expedition of environmental licenses in mining projects rather than truly foster spaces of dialogue, consensus and political inclusion. For the most part, such mechanisms have also been blind to the gendered impacts of extractivism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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20. Español costeño vs. español andino en Perú: reexamen de la cuestión.
- Author
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de Crignis, Patricia
- Subjects
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PHONOLOGY , *PHONETICS - Abstract
This paper deals with the origin of the theory of español costeño and español andino, focusing on yeísmo and lleísmo, on the basis of which the theory was developed at the turn of the 19th century. I argue that the early conception of español costeño and español andino has strongly influenced the kind of research we have been conducting about the geographic varieties to this day. The aim of this study therefore, is to sharpen our understanding of the former zeitgeist of research and to stimulate further 'big data'-based studies on español costeño, español andino and español amazónico, the third Peruvian geographic variety, traditionally neglected by linguistic research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. From social networks to bird enthusiasts: reporting interactions between plastic waste and birds in Peru.
- Author
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Ayala, Félix, Vizcarra, Jhonson K., Castillo-Morales, Karen, Torres-Zevallos, Uriel, Cordero-Maldonado, Cristel, Ampuero-Merino, Lyanne, Herrera-Peralta, Kárlom, De-la-Torre, Gabriel Enrique, Angulo, Fernando, and Cárdenas-Alayza, Susana
- Subjects
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SOCIAL networks , *SCIENTIFIC literature , *PLASTIC scrap , *BIRD diversity , *PLASTIC bags , *CORMORANTS - Abstract
Summary: Peru has the second-highest diversity of birds in the world, but little is known about the interactions between birds and plastic waste. To fill this knowledge gap, we searched the scientific literature, collected information from social networks such as Facebook and databases such as Macaulay Library and iNaturalist and solicited records through messaging with researchers and bird enthusiasts. We found 119 bird interactions with plastic debris involving 39 species from 20 families, with the red-legged cormorant Phalacrocorax gaimardi and the neotropical cormorant Phalacrocorax brasilianus being the most affected species. By type of interaction category, plastic waste in nests was the most abundant, followed by entanglement, capture and handling and ingestion. Ropes, nets and soft plastics such as bags were the most frequently reported types of waste. As our methodology has limitations, it is probable that other species that also interact with plastic waste have not been reported, so we recommend further study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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22. Ethnobotanical inventory of medicinal plants used by Cashinahua (Huni Kuin) herbalists in Purus Province, Peruvian Amazon.
- Author
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Horackova, Jana, Chuspe Zans, Maria Elena, Kokoska, Ladislav, Sulaiman, Naji, Clavo Peralta, Zoyla Mirella, Bortl, Ludvik, and Polesny, Zbynek
- Subjects
- *
MEDICINAL plants , *RESEARCH methodology , *PERUVIANS , *INTERVIEWING , *POPULATION geography , *TRADITIONAL medicine , *PLANT roots , *CLIMATOLOGY , *PHYTOCHEMICALS , *INTELLECT , *LEAVES , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
This study aims to document the diversity of medicinal plants used by the Cashinahua people (also known as Huni Kuin) of the Curanja River, as well as describe and compare their uses with pharmacological and phytochemical records from previously published studies. The ethnic has been studied to a limited extent from an ethnobotanical perspective. The study area is located in the Ucayali region, eastern Central Amazon, where ancestral knowledge is preserved due to the limited accessibility of the region. Between November 2010 and June 2015, a total of 11 months were spent on the survey, which included a short-term visit to complete voucher specimen collection and taxonomic identification. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 10 Cashinahua traditional healers and 10 midwives. Vernacular names, ethnomedicinal uses, plant parts used and forms of preparation and administration were recorded. Ethnopharmacological, pharmacological and phytochemical uses were checked through survey of the previously published papers indexed on Web of Science databases between 2018 and 2022. We obtained data on 467 plant taxa, among which we highlighted 79 species unreported or rarely cited for medicinal use or phytochemical analysis. These species were spread over 60 genera and 42 botanical families, with Acanthaceae being the most represented. Leaves were used the most frequently (93.56%). Among the 79 species, the most reported therapeutic activities involved pregnancy and birth disorders (13.84%), followed by poisonings, infections and infestations. The predominant application form was external (87%). Our study indicates that there are locally valuable species that have not yet been studied for their medical potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Brokering Bureaucrats: How Bureaucrats and Civil Society Facilitate Clientelism Where Parties are Weak.
- Author
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Cornell, Agnes and Grimes, Marcia
- Subjects
- *
BROKERS , *PATRONAGE , *CIVIL society , *CIVIL service , *BUREAUCRACY , *POLITICAL parties - Abstract
Clientelism, the exchange of selective rewards for votes, is fraught with commitment problems and questions remain regarding how it occurs in settings lacking strong parties. In such settings, we argue, bureaucrats can act as brokers using their own networks. Bureaucrats can use their discretionary power to cultivate reciprocal relations with voters and leverage this political capital in negotiations with politicians to secure career advancements. As brokering requires networks, we hypothesize that bureaucrats with connections to civil society are more likely to exhibit brokering behavior, and especially in localities with stronger civil society. Original survey data of bureaucrats (N =1300) in a context of weak parties, Peru's 25 regions plus the city of Lima, show that bureaucrats with connections to civil society are more likely to exhibit brokering behavior. Political and party connections are weaker predictors of brokering. The paper thus shows how locally connected bureaucrats may aid in coordinating clientelism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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24. La vegetación de Yura (Arequipa, Perú).
- Author
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Galán de Mera, Antonio, Linares Perea, Eliana, and Quino, Juan Montoya
- Subjects
- *
SOIL salinity , *PLANT communities - Abstract
In this paper we describe the vegetation of Yura and its surroundings using the Braun-Blanquet phytosociological method. As a result, we report 3 new associations (Equiseto gigantei-Escallonietum angustifoliae, Pohlio longicollis-Rhodoscirpetum yurensis and Atriplici myriophyllae-Mesembryanthemetum crystallini) and 3 new alliances (Muehlenbeckio fruticulosae-Helogynion stramineae, Polypogono interrupti-Pohlion longicollis and Atriplici myriophyllae-Mesembryanthemion crystallini) of base-rich saline environments. In addition, Lycio distichi-Helogynetum stramineae is presented as a corrected name and the area of the Schino mollis-Prosopidetum calderensis association is extended to the NW. In sum, nine plant communities have been observed, among which the Pohlio longicollis-Rhodoscirpetum yurensis association is worth highlighting, as it presents a recently described Cyperaceae, associated with a bryophyte possibly recorded for the first time in southern Peru at a much lower altitude than known. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Aprendiendo sobre Alfabetización de Datos Personales: criterios para evaluar intervenciones en América Latina.
- Author
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Reilly, Katherine, Flores, Marieliv, and Morales, Esteban
- Subjects
- *
DIGITAL transformation , *PERSONALLY identifiable information , *COMMUNITIES , *DATA protection , *DIGITAL technology - Abstract
Our pilot project, Son Mis Datos (It's My Data), is among several initiatives that have arisen over the past few years to address the need for personal data literacy in an era of increasing datafication, platformization, algorithmic decision making and digital transformation. The vast majority of these projects have emerged in Europe, North America and Australia, often in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal and regulatory initiatives such as the Global Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). Given this period of experimentation with community intervention, there is little clarity about what constitutes a successful personal data literacy initiative, particularly for the Latin American context, given its particular experience with digital transformation, unique tradition of communications theory, and position within the global economy. In this paper we explore and critique the goals of other personal data literacies as a foundation for our own set of evaluative criteria. We then turn these criteria on the Son Mis Datos initiative to explore the assumptions, successes and shortcomings of our initiative. The paper concludes with a set of recommendations for how to pursue personal data literacy work that is culturally relevant and grounded in the needs and perspectives of local communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
26. Análisis bibliométrico de la producción científica de las psicólogas en Perú.
- Author
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Ventura-León, José, Mamani-Benito, Oscar, Tocto-Muñoz, Shirley, and Curahua-Guillen, Karen
- Subjects
- *
BIBLIOMETRICS , *WOMEN psychologists , *GENDER inequality , *PSYCHOLOGY , *RESEARCH - Abstract
Gender inequality has not been oblivious to science, where the under-representation of women in the academic scope is a concern. This is a problem that requires in-depth study, especially in careers with high percentages of women such as psychology and regions such as Latin America where there is a considerable proportion of female scientific psychologists. Despite this scene, the feminine production is known to present an increase; however, it is still lower than the masculine one. This shows that women are under-represented in leadership positions, hiring and applying for grants, and financing of research projects in public health and epidemiology. Likewise, review studies on female production in psychology are scarce in Peru and Latin America. The objective of this research is to characterize the production of women researchers in psychology by type of research, area of application, leadership and subject matter. For such objectives, a total of 149 papers published by 14 women researchers recorded in Peru's National Registry of Science, Technology and Technological Innovation (RENACYT) were analyzed. Four psychologists were excluded because they did not have their scientific production declared; in addition, repeated documents and those which did not correspond to scientific documents, such as congress summaries, papers in non-indexed journals and those excluded from any database were also excluded under the PRISMA's recommendations. The results show a greater quantity of co-authorships (60.4 %), studies with empirical designs (79.2 %), of associative objective (36.2 %), correlational strategy (21.5 %) and a greater quantity of papers in the clinical and health subfield (38.9 %) and education (38.3 %). As for the subject matter, clinical disorders (23.5 %) and cognitive processes (16.8 %) appear with greater frequency. Regarding these findings, there is scientific information evidencing that empirical designs are the most usual form of research, while the theoretical ones are the opposite; at least in Latin American. Furthermore, a ranking of the 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century only includes two women: Mary Ainsworth and Anna Freud, ranked 98th and 100th respectively. As for the fact of finding that more than 50 % of researchers occupy the position of co-author, previous studies show similar percentages in the health field indicating an increase from 50.3 % to 55.6 % in co-authorship. Finally, there is little scientific literature about the frequent topics studied by psychologists; therefore, these results are unprecedented; however, a search in Scopus by keywords reveals that HIV is the most studied topic in Peru; a variable located in the clinical and health subfield. Likewise, another variable that appears in the search is depression, that can be included in the topic of clinical disorders. Despite these results, the study has the following limitations: firstly, feminine scientific production can be studied from diverse sources such as review of publications in a journal, presentations at a congress, production in Scopus, which can cause difficulties in contrasting results. Secondly, there are no studies on thematic analysis, which does not allow comparison with previous research and suggests taking the findings with caution because it has a more exploratory connotation, so it is recommended to continue with this type of study. In conclusion, research psychologists carry out empirical studies framed in the analysis of the relationship between variables with a lesser predominance of theoretical and manipulative, quasi-experimental or single case studies. To a greater extent, the research is clinical and based on health. The women appear as co-authors in a large percentage of studies where the most frequent subject is clinical disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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27. Measuring governance, democracy and participation: Lessons from two decades of experience in Peru.
- Author
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Herrera, Javier, Hidalgo, Nancy, Razafindrakoto, Mireille, and Roubaud, François
- Subjects
- *
HOUSEHOLD surveys , *PARTICIPATION , *DEMOCRACY - Abstract
This paper presents Peru's unique experience in measuring governance through household surveys. Launched at the initiative of the authors in the early 2000s, and coordinated since then by one of them, this survey module is, to the best of our knowledge, the most ambitious (in terms of the length of series, statistical properties, ownership) ever carried out on a global scale by a national institute of statistics (INEI). The Peruvian experience has contributed to both demonstrating the validity of the approach chosen to measure governance, prior to the adoption of SDG 16 in 2015, and supporting the regular production of indicators on governance, primarily those of SDG 16. The first part provides a brief overview of the Peruvian context and demonstrates the importance of monitoring governance issues in general, and in this country in particular. In the second part, we describe the main methodological options and innovations adopted by INEI since the launch of the module. The third part illustrates the analytical potential of the approach based on a few empirical examples, while the fourth part presents various ways through which the data has been used so far and some institutional challenges faced in promoting the use of governance statistics. Finally, we conclude by drawing key lessons from this initiative and outlining prospects for the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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28. Evidentiality, Assertional Force and Common Ground Management in Conchucos Quechua.
- Author
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Bendezú-Araujo, Raúl
- Subjects
- *
CONVERSATION analysis , *LOGICAL prediction - Abstract
The literature on Quechuan languages describes the enclitics =mi and =chi as markers of evidentiality, with the former indicating direct evidence and the latter marking conjecture or inference. In this paper, I argue that in Conchucos Quechua they can be better characterised as markers of two degrees of assertional force, which the speakers use for common ground management purposes. For this, I present an analysis of semi-controlled conversational data under the question-under-discussion model of discourse structure. Additionally, I offer a preliminary version of how these functions could be formalised in such a theoretical framework using the model of the Table. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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29. Traditional Knowledge of Stingless Bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Meliponini) in the Peruvian Amazon.
- Author
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Delgado, Cesar, Mejía, Kember, Rasmussen, Claus, and Romero, Rosa
- Subjects
- *
TRADITIONAL knowledge , *APIDAE , *STINGLESS bees , *SUSTAINABILITY , *HYMENOPTERA , *COMMUNITIES , *HONEYBEES - Abstract
This paper describes the traditional knowledge on the management of stingless bee colonies and the use of honey by Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities of the department of Loreto, in the Peruvian Amazon. Semi-structured interviews and collection of voucher bees were carried out from June to August 2016 and from November to December 2017. The informants were selected through intentional non-probabilistic sampling (snowball sampling). During the study, 21 communities were visited, of which some of the community members in thirteen communities kept stingless bees. A total of 17 species of stingless bees are reported as used in the communities for either rearing or harvesting of honey from the forest with Melipona eburnea being the most common species. The way communities classify, manage, and use bees depends on how they perceive these insects, informed by knowledge processed and incorporated from other communities. In these communities, they use honey and pollen, with honey being the main product. Fourteen health conditions are treated with honey, with the most treated conditions being related to respiratory ailments, fertility, and reproduction. The study provides a basis for incorporating stingless bees into conservation and sustainable production policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Reconstituting Cuisine: A Culinary Perspective on Collapse, Conquest, and Resistance from Pre-Columbian Peru.
- Author
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Cutright, Robyn E.
- Subjects
- *
CULTURAL identity , *GROUP identity , *COOKING , *SKIM milk - Abstract
Cuisine is a powerful reflection of social and cultural identity. This paper reconstructs culinary change and continuity on the pre-Hispanic north coast of Peru as a window into ancient experiences of collapse and conquest. Using archaeological data from three sites in the Jequetepeque Valley between 600-1500 CE, I identify points of change as well as persistent patterns in how rural farmers procured, prepared, and consumed daily meals. By considering the nature and timing of changes, I suggest that daily meals may have been a site of resistance and an expression of local cultural identity in the past. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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31. Clinical efficacy of synbiotics in children with allergic rhinitis: An observational cohort study from a private medical center in Peru.
- Author
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Galvan Calle, Cesar A., Díaz Vásquez, Cecilia, Muñoz Leon, Ricardo, Matos Benavides, Edgar E., and Verde Leon, Alejandra V.
- Subjects
- *
ALLERGIC rhinitis , *SYNBIOTICS , *MEDICAL centers , *COHORT analysis , *SCIENTIFIC observation - Abstract
Background: Probiotics in allergic rhinitis (AR) have shown improvement in clinical and quality of life scores, whereas the role of synbiotics in the treatment of AR has been poorly investigated. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the clinical efficacy of synbiotics in children with AR. Methods: An observational, prospective cohort study of pediatric outpatients with AR from a private medical center in Peru (2021) was conducted. At baseline, patients who were prescribed synbiotics during routine and those who were not (controls) recruited and followed up on Days 30, 60, and 90 of follow‐up. Clinical efficacy was assessed with differences in Visual Analogous Scale (VAS), Total Nasal Symptom Score (TNSS), Rhinitis Control Assessment Test (RCAT), and the Pediatric Rhinoconjunctivitis Quality of Life Questionnaire (PRQLQ) scores between groups at follow‐up. Mean differences ± standard deviation (SD) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) are reported. Results: Two hundred and fifteen participants were analyzed. Compared to controls (n = 115), those who used synbiotics (n = 100) had significantly lower VAS (mean difference 1.3; 95% CI: 0.8–1.8), TNSS (mean difference 1.1; 95% CI: 0.5–1.7) and higher RCAT scores and PRQLQ scores (mean difference 2.2; 95% CI: −3.3 to −1.2) and (mean difference 7.0; 95% CI: 3.1–10.9), respectively, at Day 90 of follow‐up Conclusions: This paper reports significant improvement in clinical (VAS, RCAT, TNSS) and quality of life (PRQLQ) scores of small and large sizes, respectively. These preliminary findings support the need of future trials to assess the role of synbiotics in children with AR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Characterizing the Dyes of Pre-Columbian Andean Textiles: Comparison of Ambient Ionization Mass Spectrometry and HPLC-DAD.
- Author
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Ayala, Jennifer Campos, Mahan, Samantha, Wilson, Brenan, Antúnez de Mayolo, Kay, Jakes, Kathryn, Stein, Renée, and Armitage, Ruth Ann
- Subjects
- *
DYES & dyeing , *TEXTILES , *FLAVONOIDS , *TIME-of-flight mass spectrometry - Abstract
The complex and colorful textiles of ancient Peru have long been a focus of technical study, particularly to characterize the sources of the wide variety of dyes utilized by these Andean artisans. This manuscript describes the characterization of the dyes of both primary (red, blue, and yellow) and secondary (purple, orange, and green) colors sampled from textiles spanning five major civilizations: the Paracas Necropolis, the Nazca, the Wari, the Chancay, and the Lambayeque, all from Peru. All but the Paracas Necropolis samples were part of technical conservation studies of the ancient South American textiles collections of the Michael C. Carlos Museum. Analysis of the dyes was carried out utilizing direct analysis in real time time-of-flight mass spectrometry (DART-MS) and paper spray MS. To validate these ambient ionization MS methods, the samples were further investigated using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with ultraviolet-visible diode array detection (DAD). These results show that ambient ionization MS methods are simple and fast for characterization of the general classes of dyes, e.g., plant reds vs. insect reds, and indigoids in blues and greens. Due to the myriad possible sources of yellow dyes and their tendency to undergo oxidative decomposition, positively identifying those components in these yarns was difficult, though some marker compounds and flavonoid decomposition products were readily identified by ambient ionization mass spectrometry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. CONSERVADORES EN TIKTOK: POLARIZACIÓN SOCIAL EN EL PERÚ.
- Author
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CUEVAS-CALDERÓN, ELDER, YALÁN DONGO, EDUARDO, and KANASHIRO, LILIAN
- Subjects
- *
POLARIZATION (Social sciences) , *POLITICAL communication , *FAKE news , *VIOLENCE , *CONSERVATIVES - Abstract
TikTok's infotainment exposes users to disturbing and harmful content, mainly broadcast by conservative groups. In this paper, we analyze the political uses from conservative groups during the social polarization in Peru in 2022. Fake news, harassing messages and promoting violence go unnoticed due to the application's lax security of the app. From a qualitative perspective of an exploratory study, we studied videos and comments on TikTok from conservative groups, regarding only the ones with inappropriate content that is still available and violates TikTok's policies. Findings show that these groups produce discourses that assume protective positions from moral privileges that represent current fears in hypothetical futures (temporarydystopian), build their communication from the perspective of the forgotten man or the deprivation of privileges (actor-victimizer) and isolate demands from political to an individual (sacralized-spatial) perspective. We have categorized our findings as follows: a) unsatisfaction, b) deprivation, c) relegation and d) oblivion. This article seeks to contribute to the initial research on the politicalcommunicative uses of TikTok. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
34. Percepciones del impacto de la pandemia en las prácticas docentes de Chile y Perú.
- Author
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Andrada, Pablo and Mateus, Julio-César
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC degrees , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *EDUCATORS , *TEACHERS , *COVID-19 , *GENDER inequality - Abstract
This paper is part of the international EduCovid19 project that seeks to describe teachers' perceptions of the impact of COVID-19 on their practices, as well as those of their students. In this context, this text focuses on making comparisons of teachers' perceptions on different variables and projecting their consequences on their teaching careers. A sample (N=541) of Chilean and Peruvian teachers of all educational levels participated in the study through a virtual structured questionnaire. The results show inequalities in the teaching practices of both countries based on significant differences linked to gender inequality, socioeconomic gaps, and the academic degree of the educators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. 'Aquí viene una Veneca más': Venezuelan migrants and 'the sexual question' in Peru.
- Author
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Irons, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *HEALTH policy , *NOMADS , *HEALTH services accessibility , *SOCIAL stigma , *INTERVIEWING , *PUBLIC health , *SOCIAL justice , *SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *SEX distribution , *ETHNOLOGY research , *PUBLIC welfare , *POLICY sciences , *SEXUAL health , *REPRODUCTIVE health , *MEDICAL needs assessment , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Migrant access to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services has been highlighted as an urgent priority for the 800,000+ Venezuelans who have arrived in Peru in recent years due to political and economic crisis. Venezuelan migrants in Peru, however, negotiate their access to SRH services in what anthropologists term a 'geography of blame', and are accused and stigmatised for having imported sexually transmitted infections to the local population. Alongside this blame, female migrants are highly sexualised and face stigma, resulting in real and perceived threats to their safety, wellbeing, and integration. By juxtaposing ethnographic research and 50 interviews conducted with female migrants living in Lima, their Limeño neighbours, and with local NGOs, the paper argues how stigma is itself a neglected public health issue. Addressing SRH needs for Venezuelan migrants is not only a question of rolling out health campaigns or providing pills, but that underlying social issues such as sexualisation and stigma need to also be recognised and incorporated into policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Aggressive bidding and the renegotiation of concession contracts: Empirical evidence from Peru*.
- Author
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Bonifaz, José L. and Saavedra, Eduardo H.
- Subjects
- *
BIDDERS , *BIDS , *LETTING of contracts , *RENEGOTIATION , *CONTRACTS , *ABSOLUTE value , *DATABASES - Abstract
This paper confirms a positive relationship between the aggressiveness of bids and the probability of renegotiating concession contracts. We use a database of 113 concessions awarded in Peru, finding that a 1% increase in bidding aggressiveness increases the probability of contract renegotiation by 2.4%–3%. This impact is higher for the transportation sector. Our results are robust to several econometric specifications. These results confirm the hypothesis that bidders will submit aggressive bids to renegotiate contract terms once the government and concessionaire are tied, and competition is no longer possible. • This paper is framed within those that study the economic and institutional determinants of concession contract renegotiations. Specifically, our objective is to study empirically how aggressive bids in concessions induce a higher number of renegotiations of such contracts. • There are few papers showing the impact of aggressive bids on concession contract renegotiations. For this reason, we have chosen to review separately two bodies of literature. First, we review the contributions on the institutional determinants of concession contract renegotiations. Second, we review the few studies that show the relationship between aggressive bids and the consequent renegotiations of such contracts. In this sense, aggressive bids become another explanatory variable among the determinants of renegotiations that have been studied more extensively. • With respect to aggressive bids, we understand in this work that they are those whose winning bid differs substantially from the estimates indicated by Proinversión, according to the value of the awarded bid. Mathematically, we define aggressiveness of a bid as the absolute value of the following formula: [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. 'Mercatores isti regulandi': Monopolies and moral regulation of the market in Pedro de Oñate's De contractibus.
- Author
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Decock, Wim
- Subjects
- *
MONOPOLIES , *ECONOMIC history , *INTELLECTUAL property , *METROPOLIS , *CONTRACTS , *PROPERTY rights - Abstract
Summary: Compared to the writings of other teólogos-juristas belonging to the so-called School of Salamanca, Pedro de Oñate's (1567-1646) De contractibus has met with little if almost no interest in the literature. It nevertheless marks an epochal achievement in the history of juridical and economic thought. Published between 1646 and 1654, Oñate's De contractibus epitomizes five centuries of scholastic thinking about the moral regulation of the market. It is a spectacular work, addressing hundreds of problems related to contractual agreements and commercial life in general. This paper offers an overview of Oñate's lengthy assessment of monopolistic practices, including price-fixing cartels, import barriers, the creation of artificial scarcity, and legal monopolies, including the conceptualization of intellectual property. Two major conclusions can be reached from the close-reading of Oñate's treatment of monopolistic practices. First, Oñate's opinions are marked by an even starker emphasis on individual rights, property and freedom than those of his colleagues working in major cities on the other side of the Atlantic. Second, his analysis is not only the reflection of his extraordinary knowledge of centuries of scholastic thinking about the morality of the market, but also of his practical experience in the New World. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. De las batallas por la memoria a la marca del conflicto: "terruqueo", estigmatización y violencia en el Perú reciente.
- Author
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Velásquez Villalba, Fernando
- Subjects
- *
CIVIL war , *MASS mobilization , *TRUTH commissions , *SOCIAL movements , *POLITICAL violence - Abstract
Within the framework of what is understood in this article as "recent Peru" (that is, post-Fujimorista Peru in general and the 2016-2021 period in particular), this paper studies the relationship between the memory of the Peruvian internal armed conflict (1980-2000) and what in Peru is called "terruqueo" as a technology for delegitimising and stigmatising social movements that contest the neoliberal discourse of development and modernity. Considering the elements that the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's Final Report (2003) identifies as central to understanding political and armed violence (racism, discrimination, and centralism), this article analyses, from the perspective of coloniality, the process of artificial and convenient construction that turns a social mobilisation that contradicts the Fujimorista totality into a political enemy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
39. Agriculture and water resources: UNFCCC influence on Peruvian adaptation regulations to increase resilience against climate change...
- Author
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Arana-Ruedas, Del Piero R. and Moggiano, Nabilt
- Subjects
- *
AGRICULTURAL water supply , *WATER supply , *WATER in agriculture , *CLIMATE change ,PARIS Agreement (2016) - Abstract
Agriculture and water resource are highly threatened due to climate change, increasing the probability of backsliding on almost every aspect of sustainable development worldwide. For instance, water resource distribution throughout the Peruvian territory is not homogeneous. Hydrometeorological phenomena also threaten it, so it is crucial for the agriculture sector and water management to increase resilience against climate change. The study aims to understand the Peruvian conduct under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) regime. Its influence in the Peruvian adaptation regulation and public institutions over the years and the interaction with the latest commitment to the UNFCCC related to climate change agriculture - water resources. The methodology used for the study was qualitative, delivered throughout a documentary analysis, and narrative design among scientific papers, UNFCCC documentation, and Peruvian regulation to weave the experience occurred and the sequences of the events to set up a general narrative. The results show that Peru has active participation in the UNFCCC, particularly under a neoliberalism approach. The convention pushed institutional and regulatory development of the Peruvian Government constantly. Also, after the Paris Agreement, one of the most important influences was the implementation of Law N° 30754 on climate change, which articulates all the regulations related to it, providing a national, more substantial legally-binding commitment. Finally, it is important for Peru to analyze the achievement of current adaptation actions and keep studying the impacts of climate change at a local level to develop a bottom-up approach for an effective policy formulation-implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. EL PERÚ VIRREINAL TRANSPACÍFICO, 1580-1604. AGENTES, PLATA Y PRODUCTOS CHINOS ENTRE POTOSÍ, LIMA, NUEVA ESPAÑA, FILIPINAS Y MACAO.
- Author
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BONIALIAN, MARIANO
- Subjects
- *
MERCANTILE system , *CREDIT bureaus , *ELITE (Social sciences) ,NEW Spain - Abstract
The mercantile expeditions organized by Lima's commercial and political elite who traded with the Philippines and China during times of notable silver production in Potosí are studied from the last two decades of the sixteenth century until 1604. This analysis emphasizes the roles in this trade of the viceroys of New Spain, Perú, and the governors of the Philippine islands such as Francisco Tello de Guzmán. Case studies are undertaken of the networks built by Limenian neighbors Juan de Segura and Diego Núñez de Campoverde. This paper ends with an analysis of the merchandise coming from the East destined for Lima, Potosí, Sucre, and La Paz. Research for this article has been conducted in the General Archive of the Indies (Sevilla, Spain), the Peruvian General Archive, México City's General Notary Archive, and the Bolivia's Nationals Archive and Library. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
41. Affective life, "vulnerable" youths, and international volunteering in a residential care programme in Cusco, Peru.
- Author
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Lin, Chih‐Chen Trista and Minca, Claudio
- Subjects
- *
AFFECT (Psychology) , *RESIDENTIAL care , *VOLUNTEER service , *TEENAGE mothers , *INDIGENOUS youth - Abstract
This paper critically engages with the implications of the "affect turn" in the geographies of development and volunteering. By way of considering "affective life" at a residential youth care centre in Peru through an ethnographic study, we aim to contribute to current discussions of "(self‐)transformation" taking place through affectivity in the experience of volunteering. Conceptually, our approach to investigating "affective life" and volunteering involves two steps. First, we critically review this body of work's recent focus on the individualistic mode of volunteer self‐transformation in encountering "vulnerable others." We identify the need to think about affect and embodiment also from the perspectives of the "vulnerable" groups whose lives are entangled with the presence of international volunteering. Second, we argue for an affect‐informed approach to socio‐politically shaped vulnerability, with a particular emphasis on lived experiences and affective capacities related to enduring social and material conditions. Against the backdrop of marginalisation of adolescent mothers from rural and indigenous backgrounds, many of whom are survivors of sexual abuse, we analyse the experiences of these youths living at a specific residential care centre and interacting with volunteers on a daily basis. In doing so, we employ a series of perspectives from the residents, while taking into account the organisational environment. We also show the complex ways in which resident–volunteer encounters are at play in life‐enhancing affective states, capacities, and relations emerging among the residents. Our findings on the residents' self‐ and shared capacity of transformation highlights the importance of attending to the spatialities of affective life in academic work focused on the contemporary geographies of international volunteering. This paper critically engages with the implications of the "affect turn" in the geographies of development and volunteering. By way of considering "affective life" at a residential youth care centre in Peru through an ethnographic study, it also aims to contribute to current discussions of vulnerability and "(self‐)transformation" taking place through affectivity in the experience of volunteering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Necropolitics in the Andes: Reading the Senderista As Sovereign Subject or As Subject of Sovereignty in Two Peruvian Novels.
- Author
-
Hunt, Rosanna
- Subjects
- *
SOVEREIGNTY , *BIOPOLITICS (Sociobiology) , *TERRORISM , *VIOLENCE - Abstract
This paper discusses ways in which literary representations of senderistas strive to humanise the figure of the necropolitically-defined state 'enemy' and do so within the broad moment of neoliberal consensus-building around the friend-enemy division in Peru. Drawing on Achille Mbembe's reformulation of biopolitics, the paper offers close readings of Vargas Llosa's Lituma en los Andes (1994) and Roncagliolo's Abril rojo (2006). Where Vargas Llosa's rehumanising of the individual senderista leaves the absolutely enmity of Sendero Luminoso as 'terror' intact, Roncagliolo recasts the senderista as an irreducibly complex subject defined as much as victim as perpetrator of violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. La «cesión de uso» como mecanismo de despojo territorial de las comunidades nativas en el Perú.
- Author
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Ruiz Molleda, Juan Carlos and del Rocío Gavancho León, Olga Cristina
- Subjects
- *
INDIGENOUS peoples , *HUMAN rights , *LAND reform , *PROPERTY rights ,INDIGENOUS & Tribal Peoples Convention (1989) - Abstract
This paper analyses the Peruvian institutional scaffolding that favours mechanisms for dispossessing land from indigenous peoples in Peru, despite their protection by regulations that recognise them as such and their constitutional status, which imposes binding obligations. International human rights protection standards are therefore violated, along with the International Labour Organization's Convention 169 and the jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR). It is therefore noteworthy that the Peruvian State has approved the titling of indigenous peoples' lands that are suitable for forestry "Transfer of use rights" - the main mechanism of dispossession affecting the ancestral territories of the indigenous peoples of the Peruvian jungle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. If you Build it, will they come? Use of Rural Drinking Water Systems in the Peruvian Amazon.
- Author
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Nelson-Nuñez, Jami, Mostafa, Simón, Mahoney, Ryan B., and Linden, Karl G.
- Subjects
- *
RURAL water supply , *DRINKING water , *SOCIAL influence , *WATER use , *RURAL geography - Abstract
While organisations across the world struggle to extend access to the 522 million living in rural areas without clean water, those who do have access do not necessarily use it. This paper explores why, within areas that have public taps with treated water, some individuals continue to use water from untreated sources. We focus on non-use of available rural water supply systems as well as inconsistent use, a phenomenon typically overlooked. Based on surveys in 12 rural communities with water systems in the Peruvian Amazon and qualitative interviews, this study finds community meeting attendance is important for consistent use as attendance increases social influence and reinforces information about the importance of clean water. Non-users are more likely to be those living furthest from the water source and with lower levels of education. Findings point to ways in which community approaches to heath interventions may be more likely to reach some – those with stronger ties to communities, who live closer and have higher levels of education – than others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Índice de eficiencia técnica de las empresas de Perú.
- Author
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Tello, Mario D.
- Subjects
- *
HOTEL restaurants , *INTERVENTION (Federal government) , *GOVERNMENT corporations , *FACTORIALS - Abstract
In a decade of low TFP --factorial total productivity-- in Latin America, the paper shows evidence of the low level of TFP due to the degree of technical inefficiency of companies in the Peruvian productive sector case. For this, the technical efficiency indices of 116 875 companies (83 271 formal and 33 604 informal) distributed in 25 regions and ten productive sectors (agriculture, livestock, agriculture, mining, fishing, manufacturing, construction, commerce, hotels and restaurants, and the rest are non-governmental services). The estimates yielded a general average efficiency index for the regions and sectors of Peru of 37.94 --in other words, the total product of the companies would multiply by 2.6 without requiring additional productive factors--. This figure suggests that government or company interventions that induce technically efficient behaviors in production can contribute to increasing the TFP of the economy, probably at lower cost and time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Immigration, labor markets and discrimination: Evidence from the Venezuelan Exodus in Perú.
- Author
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Groeger, Andre, León-Ciliotta, Gianmarco, and Stillman, Steven
- Subjects
- *
EMIGRATION & immigration , *VENEZUELANS , *IMMIGRANTS , *LABOR market , *FOREIGN workers , *IMMIGRATION policy - Abstract
Venezuela is currently experiencing the biggest crisis in its recent history. This has led more than 7.3 million Venezuelans to emigrate, at least 1.5 million of those to Peru, which amounted to an increase of over 4 percent in the Peruvian population. Venezuelan immigrants in Peru are relatively similar in cultural terms, but, on average, more skilled than Peruvians. In this paper, we first examine Venezuelans' perceptions of being discriminated against in Peru. Using an instrumental variable strategy, we document a causal relationship between the level of employment in the informal sector – where most immigrants are employed – and reports of discrimination. We then study the impact of Venezuelan migration on local's labor market outcomes, reported crime rates, and attitudes using a variety of data sources. We find that inflows of Venezuelans to particular locations led to increased employment and income among locals, decreased reported crime, and improved reported community quality. We conduct a heterogeneity analysis to identify the mechanisms behind these labor market effects and discuss the implications for Peruvian immigration policy. • We analyze the impact of Venezuelan immigration on the Peruvian labor market • We also study the labor market determinants of discrimination against Venezuelans. • Immigration has mostly positive effects on natives' labor market outcomes. • More informal labor market competition increases discrimination against immigrants. • We discuss the implications for Peruvian immigration policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Abandono de los estudiantes de una institución universitaria privada y su intención de retorno en época de COVID-19: un análisis para la toma de decisiones.
- Author
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Yudet Millones-Liza, Dany and Emperatriz García-Salirrosas, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC impact , *COLLEGE dropouts , *COLLEGE students , *TUITION , *SCHOOL dropouts , *INTENTION , *VOCATIONAL guidance - Abstract
This paper investigated the causes that lead university students to abandon their careers as well as the reasons that would drive their return. With the application of the Net Promoter Score (NPS) metric, it was found that 301 (69.95 %) of the 551 students who left the institution did not return. The economic factor (56.8 %), the academic organization (20 %) and health (13.6 %) were identified as the main causes of student dropout. Students would be willing to return if better technological platforms were implemented (27.2 %), if tuition and enrollment costs were reduced (31.8 %), and if a job bank were made available (27.3 %). Promoter (23.6 %), passive (34.9 %) and detractor (41.5 %) students were identified; the promoters are those who are willing to recommend the educational institution and at the other extreme are the detractors who are capable of harming the image of the institution. In conclusion, the intention to return to their studies depends on the type of student. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A new species of Dermadena (Digenea: Lepocreadiidae) from the stone triggerfish Pseudobalistes naufragium (Tetraodontiformes: Balistidae) in the South American Pacific Ocean.
- Author
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Simões, R.O., Chero, J.D., Cruces, C.L., Sáez, G.M., Maldonado, A., and Luque, J.L.
- Subjects
- *
DIGENEA , *SEMINAL vesicles , *MOLECULAR phylogeny , *SPECIES , *OCEAN , *STONE - Abstract
The present paper describes a new species of Dermadena (Digenea) parasitizing Pseudobalistes naufragium in Puerto Pizarro, northern Peru, using light and scanning electronic microscopy (SEM). Additionally, molecular analysis was also performed to determine the phylogenetic affinities of Dermadena within the Lepocreadiidae. The new species is differentiated from Dermadena spatiosa, Dermadena stirlingi and Dermadena lactophrysi by presenting a curved and well-developed external seminal vesicle. Also, SEM revealed numerous dome-shaped tegument protuberances forming glandular papillae with transversal wrinkles arranged roughly in concentric rows around the acetabular region, varying in size from large at the middle of the body to small at the margin. In the molecular phylogeny, the new species formed a well-supported clade with sequences of species from the Lepocreadiidae, confirming that it belongs to this family. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Constraining the critical groundwater conditions for initiation of large, irrigation-induced landslides, Siguas River Valley, Peru.
- Author
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Graber, Andrew, Santi, Paul, and Meza Arestegui, Pablo
- Subjects
- *
LANDSLIDES , *FINITE element method , *GROUNDWATER , *IRRIGATION water - Abstract
In the last three decades, a series of large landslides have occurred in the Siguas River Valley, Peru, and their causes have been attributed to irrigation input affecting the local groundwater conditions. While the causal relationship of the irrigation water to these landslides is widely accepted, the actual groundwater conditions necessary to initiate these landslides have not been previously quantified. In this paper, we present finite element modeling work to estimate the critical groundwater conditions required to initiate failure for the Zarzal and Pachaqui Chico Landslides, given back-calculated strength parameters, topography, and remote estimates of the likely range of possible groundwater scenarios. Modeling results indicate that elevated groundwater tables are required for landslide initiation and that these elevated groundwater tables are more likely due to perched zones forming from irrigation water input, rather than from elevation of the original deeper water table. In addition, the moisture content outside the saturated zone appears to be a less significant factor in landslide initiation than the position and configuration of the saturated zones. These results compare favorably to groundwater data acquired since the initiation of these landslides. Understanding of the groundwater conditions at initiation is important for designing mitigation to help prevent future landslides, and several mitigation options are briefly discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Remote sensing techniques for tracking changes caused by illegal gold mining in Madre de Dios, Peru.
- Author
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Adamek, Katarzyna, Lupa, Michał, and Zawadzki, Mateusz
- Subjects
- *
REMOTE sensing , *FOREST regeneration , *WEATHERING , *GOLD mining , *VEGETATION dynamics , *RIVER channels , *THEMATIC mapper satellite - Abstract
Illegal extraction of gold has grown to be a problem in many countries, causing the degradation of the environment. The main purpose of this paper is to investigate changes in tree cover and surface pollution. The development of a mine site has been observed and analysed with images acquired from Landsat and the Sentinel missions. The results of the study showed changes in the state of the environment, strongly suggesting the possibility of ongoing pyrite weathering processes and the transportation of clay materials down watercourses, which can cause not only the further deterioration of the environment but also slow down the natural regeneration of the forest. In addition, research has found disturbing changes in vegetation, showing a loss of tree cover in the Amazon Rainforest as high as 17%. The validity of using remote sensing methods to observe the development of individual mining sites and their characteristics was confirmed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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