342 results
Search Results
2. Unemployment Insurance in Transition and Developing Countries: Moral Hazard vs. Liquidity Constraints in Chile.
- Author
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Sehnbruch, Kirsten, Carranza Navarrete, Rafael, and Contreras Guajardo, Dante
- Subjects
MORAL hazard ,UNEMPLOYMENT insurance ,DEVELOPING countries ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,COVID-19 pandemic ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,TRANSITION economies - Abstract
One of the most complex policy issues that developing countries will face as a result of the employment crisis caused by the Covid crisis is the question of how they can better protect the unemployed. However, the analysis of unemployment insurance (UI) in developing economies with large informal sectors is in its infancy, with few papers providing solid empirical evidence. This paper therefore makes several contributions: first, it applies Chetty's 2008 landmark work on UI to a transition economy (Chile) and shows that the moral hazard effects expected by policy makers, who designed the system are minimal, while liquidity effects were entirely neglected. Second, it demonstrates that it is not enough merely to quantify effects such as moral hazard, but to understand their causes as unemployment generated by moral hazard or liquidity constraints has different welfare implications and should therefore result in different policies. By means of an RDD, this paper analyses the Chilean UI system using a large sample of administrative data, which allows for an extremely precise analysis of how the system works, thus providing invaluable empirical lessons for other countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Agribusiness moving through the Capitalocene: slow violence and renewed strategies of capitalist agriculture in Chile.
- Author
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Panez, Alexander and Olea, Jorge
- Subjects
SLOW violence ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,AGRICULTURAL industries ,FRUIT growing ,TECHNOLOGICAL progress - Abstract
Chilean fruit exports grew 252% between 1975 and 2016. This paper aims to analyze agribusiness's readjustment strategies to face the socio-ecological impacts of the Capitalocene. For this purpose, our guiding questions are: How is agribusiness reading the current socio-ecological crisis, and what strategies are its main actors proposing? The main strategies in progress are technical innovations in productive systems, the increasing scale of infrastructure, displacement toward the south of the country, and renewed narratives. This contributes to legitimizing the current agricultural model without questioning its principles, while becoming more profitable and adaptable to the Capitalocene era. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Beyond fare evasion: the everyday moralities of non-payment and underpayment on public transport.
- Author
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Muñoz, Daniel, Lee, Kris, and Plyushteva, Anna
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC transit , *TRANSPORT workers , *ETHICS , *SOCIAL media - Abstract
In attempting to understand and prevent fare evasion, existing research and policy have often categorised fare evaders based on passenger 'types' or profiles. However, such categorisations of 'malicious' or 'virtuous' behaviours rely on underlying moral claims which often go unexamined. In this paper, we study how different actors construct such moral claims as part of everyday interactions. We demonstrate that the everyday moralities of not or under-paying are diverse, locally occasioned, and emotionally charged. Drawing on social media and video data from Chile and the UK, we examine interactions between passengers, by-standers, transport workers, and transport operators. We highlight the diverse resources that actors draw upon to construct moral claims around fare evasion, including the mobilisation of alternative moral categories; attempts to produce exceptions to formal rules; and the foregrounding of moral emotions. The paper engages with an interdisciplinary body of work which reassesses existing policies and societal responses to fare evasion, while also contributing to a nascent literature on everyday morality and mobilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Teachers' politicity as a sociohistorical juncture: bringing a Freirean angle to education policy studies.
- Author
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Fernández Ugalde, Rocío
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,TEACHERS ,STRIKES & lockouts ,TEACHER organizations ,HIGHER education ,DISCOURSE analysis - Abstract
This paper engages with the Freirean concept of politicity for critical policy studies in education. The first part lays the ground to expand the conceptualisation of teachers' politicity. I argue this entails an examination of the limits and possibilities within a juncture. To develop the argument, the second part focuses on a teacher strike that took place in Chile and draws on corpus-driven discourse analysis to explore news from a national teacher organisation and from an influential newspaper. Through the angle of politicity, I identify and discuss ideational projects during the strike with an emphasis on counterhegemonic resources for change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The irruption of Afro-descendants in diversity politics: the case of Arica in northern Chile.
- Author
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De la Maza, Francisca and Campos, Luis Eugenio
- Subjects
CULTURAL pluralism ,POWER resources ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
This paper analyses the irruption of Afro-descendants in the sphere of local and national public policies as aresult of their demand for political recognition. Starting in 2000, an Afro-descendant movement developed, positioning itself locally and nationally and obtaining political recognition in 2019 under Law N° 21.151. Incorporating a'new diversity' in the design and implementation of public policies as distinct from the indigenous policies that had been implemented for more than 25 years. The paper analyses different levels of state action, relations with other diversities in the implementation of targeted policies (particularly indigenous policies) and the process of Afro-descendant recognition itself. This case shows the difficulties in broadening the social and state vision of cultural diversity and how these are reflected in disputes about the legitimacy of being the 'original' peoples as well as for spaces of power and state resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Unveiling Spatial Patterns of Exposure and Risk Perception to Air Pollution: A Case Study in Chilean Patagonia.
- Author
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Boso, Àlex, Ibarra, Sebastián, Gómez, Luis, Álvarez, Boris, Herranz, Claudio, Somos-Valenzuela, Marcelo, and Garrido, Jaime
- Subjects
AIR pollution ,ENVIRONMENTAL risk ,WOOD stoves ,RISK exposure ,RISK perception ,CITIES & towns ,PUBLIC health ,OLDER people - Abstract
Wood smoke pollution has emerged as a major public health issue in southern Chile. This paper endeavors to find evidence of environmental inequity by looking into the spatial associations between sociodemographic characteristics, exposures, and risk perception to air pollution. We integrate primary georeferenced survey data with estimates of excess outdoor exposure to wood smoke in Coyhaique, one of the most polluted cities in Latin America. Our findings reveal that certain social groups are disproportionately exposed to PM2.5. People of low-socioeconomic status, living in households with older adults and users of wood-burning stoves tend to spend more days per year with unhealthy air pollution levels. The results yield a modest but statistically significant relationship between PM2.5 levels and risk perception. Sociodemographic factors are also important predictors of air pollution risk perception. We discuss the implications in terms of environmental injustice patterns and public awareness campaigns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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8. Cognitive processing of rhythm in primary education: encounters between teaching practice and scientific evidence.
- Author
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Álamos-Gómez, José, Tejada, Jesús, and Farías, Felipe
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COGNITIVE processing of language ,MUSIC education ,RHYTHM ,MUSICAL meter & rhythm - Abstract
This paper explores how Chilean teachers approach fundamental aspects of rhythm, verifying their consistency with cognitive processing theory and findings. 203 music teachers completed a validated questionnaire with closed and open items regarding how they approach pulse, tempo, meter and rhythmic patterns during rhythm production and perception activities. The results show that, in general, teaching practices are congruent with the scientific evidence related to the processing of these musical aspects. Finally, the use of elements that facilitate synchronization or constant pulse is suggested: optimal tempi ranges for adults, use of binary meters, and the use of rhythmic patterns that prioritise the double-half relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
9. Are free trade agreements an enough condition to diversify and add value to exports? The case of Chile–Korea FTA.
- Author
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Muñoz, Felipe, Cáceres, Javiera, and López, Dorotea
- Subjects
FREE trade ,COMMERCIAL treaties ,PRIVATE sector ,PUBLIC sector ,ECONOMETRIC models - Abstract
Chile and Korea subscribed a free trade agreement in 2003, which entered into force in 2004. One of the main objectives behind the agreement was to modify the concentration of the Chilean export basket, traditionally dominated by primary products, through preferential access to the country's main export destinations. From here, this paper analyses the achievement of this objective through mixed-methods. Acknowledging that econometric models may not fully explain trade patterns, this article uses both quantitative data to understand the impact of the agreement on export flows, and qualitative information to complement these results. It concludes that Chile has not been capable of achieving the objective stated, due to constrains in the public and private sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Getting back to the state: policing the Covid-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Vilalta-Perdomo, Carlos, Fondevila, Gustavo, and Dammert, Lucía
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,POLICE legitimacy ,AUTHORITARIANISM ,TRUST ,METROPOLITAN areas ,POLITICAL trust (in government) ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
This paper analyzes the impact of the pandemic (from 2020 to 2021) on levels of trust and legitimacy of the Chilean police (Carabineros) by the population in the metropolitan area of Santiago, Chile. Based on a pseudo-panel method and a cohort fixed-effects regression model that controlled for unobserved time invariant heterogeneity, we found a significant increase in police legitimacy during the pandemic (on average, 63%, among the adult residents of the region, based on the police legitimacy index comprising six perceptual variables). Evidence suggests that the perceived performance of the Carabineros during the pandemic served to recover the trust of citizens, at least temporarily, even when this intervention entailed the enforcement of anti-popular measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Does job insecurity stimulate citizen participation? evidence from Chile and Korea.
- Author
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Lee, Yunsoo
- Subjects
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JOB security , *NEW public management , *POLITICAL participation , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Research has been conducted on job insecurity and participation in the workplace. However, to date, empirical research on the relationship between job insecurity and citizen participation is extremely scarce. To fill the void, the aim of this study is to examine the nexus between job insecurity and citizen participation in Chile and South Korea where embraced the New Public Management principle. Grievance and resource theory of participation offer contrasting predictions for the influence of job insecurity on citizen participation. Analyzing the wave 7 of the World Values Survey, this paper verifies the two lines of enquiry in examining the influence of job insecurity on citizen participation. The results of an ordered logit regression model demonstrate that the impact of job insecurity on citizen participation varied depending on the types of job insecurity and citizen participation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Bude uncommon: extractivist endings and the unthinkable politics of conservation in Lafkenche territory.
- Author
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Tironi, Manuel, Vega, Denisse, and Roa Antileo, Juan
- Subjects
WETLAND conservation - Abstract
Copyright of Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology & Society is the property of Taylor & Francis Ltd and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Irrigation subsidy policy in Chile: lessons from the allocation, uneven distribution and water resources implications.
- Author
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Jordan, Cristian, Donoso, Guillermo, and Speelman, Stijn
- Subjects
WATER distribution ,WATER supply ,IRRIGATION efficiency ,IRRIGATION ,WATER in agriculture ,IRRIGATION water - Abstract
Globally irrigation subsidies are utilized to boost modernization and increase irrigation efficiency. This paper examines the effects of the irrigation subsidy programme in Chile by reviewing 32 years of allocations and exploring the drivers and consequences of the subsidy programme with a clear market approach based on competition and a state risk-free strategy. Our analysis reveals that, despite the flexibility in targeting, the results indicate an uneven allocation to smallholders' detriment, a state inability to identify farmers' needs, market concentration and a bias towards agricultural expansion. As long as the programme remains unaltered, it will threaten agriculture and water resources' sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Passing Through the Body: Recent Exercises of Memory and Collectivity, Forty Years After the Dictatorship in Chile.
- Author
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Adaro, Mane
- Subjects
DICTATORSHIP ,MEMORY ,MILITARY government ,INTERSUBJECTIVITY ,REIFICATION - Abstract
The military dictatorship in Chile (1973–1989) promoted an ideology of the individual body, dismantling all social and collective matrices. The various artistic expressions discussed in the following text can be seen as practices of situated memory, that link the violence of that period to the exercise of a necessary intersubjectivity between different spaces of intervention and bodies. In doing this, and by taking as a starting point collective and the notion of alienated space, the aim is to reconstitute a conscious corporeality of memory and collectivity. This paper seeks to revise interpretations of these performative and photographic exercises and to ask how meaning can be produced without subjecting memory to a process of reification or immobilisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Human capital in Chile: The development of numeracy during the last 250 years.
- Author
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Llorca-Jaña, Manuel, Rivas, Javier, Pérez, Ignacio, and Navarrete-Montalvo, Juan
- Subjects
NUMERACY ,REGIONAL disparities ,TWENTY-first century ,GENDER inequality - Abstract
This paper studies the evolution of numeracy in Chile for cohorts born from the 1780s to the 1970s, providing a new series of this important indicator of human capital, essential to promote economic growth. This is the longest series currently available of any human capital indicator for Chile. It shows that numeracy was very low until the early twentieth century but that, contrary to traditional interpretations, it increased gradually from the 1780s (well before the promulgation of the primary instruction law of 1860), until full basic numeracy skills were achieved by the mid-twentieth century. This transition was completed some 3–4 decades after parallel developments occurred in the leading countries of the region and some 120 years behind the most developed areas of Europe. This development was characterized by high gender numeracy inequality until the first decades of the twentieth century, as well as by a pronounced regional inequality. However, there was a quick process of convergence across provinces, completed at the same time as gender inequality was reduced. Our numeracy data is also consistent with alternative human capital indicators such as literacy and schooling, and we provide a set of explanations about why they all improved, and their timing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Privately protected areas in increasingly turbulent social contexts: strategic roles, extent, and governance.
- Author
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Borrie, William Thomas, Gale, Trace, and Bosak, Keith
- Subjects
SOCIAL change ,ECOTOURISM ,NEOLIBERALISM ,TOURISM & the environment - Abstract
This paper considers increasing global reliance on privately protected areas (PPAs) and associated nature-based tourism (NBT). A targeted literature review was guided by three research questions, which sought to understand how neoliberal concepts and dynamics manifest in private forms of conservation; how private forms of conservation have manifested in Chile; and, how Chileans' attitudes towards their government's neoliberal policies might affect their expectations of PPAs. The search strategy resulted in 284 resources. Three dimensions of neoliberal approaches to PPAs emerged from the data each highlighting specific vulnerabilities: a loss of the social embeddedness of nature; an imposition of global, capital dynamics; and conflicting discourses and assumptions. Results suggest that, in order to improve long-term support and integration of PPAs and NBT, greater attention needs to be given to social well-being outcomes (including equity and justice concerns), building of social capital, and the preservation of local identities and histories. Additionally, regional and PPA-specific land-use planning needs to incorporate greater public engagement, cross-jurisdictional coordination, and transparent and inclusive decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Mean reversion in monetary aggregates in Chile.
- Author
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Martin-Valmayor, Miguel Angel, Gil-Alana, Luis Alberiko, Monge Moreno, Manuel, and Madariaga Becerra, Luis
- Subjects
MONEY supply ,TIME series analysis ,COINTEGRATION - Abstract
In this paper we examine the statistical properties of the monetary aggregates in Chile in order to know if the time series display mean reverting behaviour. For this purpose, we use techniques based on fractional integration. Monthly data of various Chilean monetary aggregates from January 1986 until August 2019 are used, and the results indicate very weak evidence of mean reversion. In fact, this property is only found in the case of the currency on circulation and M1 for some of the series examined; however, for M2 and M3 the results clearly show high persistence with orders of integration substantially higher than 1. Thus, shocks are expected to have a permanent nature in these cases. Another remarkable feature observed in the results is that the level of persistence in the series seems to grow with the amount of the monetary aggregate. In a multivariate context, performing a FCVAR model, evidence of cointegration is found among the monetary aggregates, finding a long run equilibrium relationship between them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Expresión de opiniones en las redes sociales: un estudio comparado de Argentina, Chile, España y México desde la perspectiva de la espiral del silencio.
- Author
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Beatriz Fernández, Carmen, Rodríguez-Virgili, Jordi, and Serrano-Puche, Javier
- Subjects
POLITICAL attitudes ,SOCIAL pressure ,POLITICAL campaigns ,YOUNG adults ,PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Iberian & Latin American Research is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The Insolent Fox: Human–Animal Relations with Protected Predators in Central-Southern Chile.
- Author
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Benavides Medina, Sebastián Pelayo
- Subjects
FOXES ,PREDATORY animals ,HUMAN-animal relationships ,SEMI-structured interviews ,PARTICIPANT observation ,COEXISTENCE of species - Abstract
This paper analyzes human–animal relations with protected predators in central-southern Chile, focusing mainly on the case of foxes. It is based on 12 months of anthropological research undertaken in the Araucanía Region, using an ethnographic approach that combined participant observation with in-depth, semi-structured interviews. It covers field material relating to cases where protected predators and small-scale farmers were caught up in conflictive situations over livestock. These situations, commonly framed as "theft" by the people affected, were central to the negative image of protected predators and, particularly, foxes. The latter were also affected by popular cultural representations of them as prototypical thieves. Nevertheless, a number of nuances in these relations suggested a particular form of "distanced sociality" with these animals, with more ambiguous characteristics than clear-cut opposition and rivalry. Aspects of coexistence and continuity between humans and these animals, together with recognition of them as creatures with both general intentionality and particular interests, are explored throughout the paper, highlighting entanglements and complex relations in a shared environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Public narratives under intensified market conditions: Chile as a critical case.
- Author
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Santori, Diego
- Subjects
NARRATION ,NATIVE language ,DISCURSIVE practices ,NEWSPAPERS ,MUTUAL intelligibility of modern languages ,NEOLIBERALISM ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,PERIODICALS - Abstract
This paper aims to extend existing theorisations around the notion of public narratives by analysing their regulatory effects under intensified market conditions. My analysis suggests that public narratives constitute a liminal space, one that it is not exclusively real or imaginary, factual or normative, but that simultaneously affects and is affected by vernacular practices and wider discursive structures. However, this paper argues that, under extreme conditions, these public narratives become a rigidifying space with homogenising/normalising effects. To do this I look at a set of ‘obligatory scenes’ captured in tales of success and struggle of teachers, parents and students in popular newspapers and fringe media in Chile. These accounts share a common ground: national assessment as a framework of intelligibility for the practices of parents, teachers and students. The central claim of this paper is that under intensified market conditions the scenes captured in these publicly available stories become ‘obligatory’ storylines, and their protagonists idealised policy subjects. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Re-making Pascua Lama: corporate financialisation and the production of extractive space.
- Author
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de los Reyes, Julie Ann
- Subjects
FINANCIALIZATION ,SHAREHOLDER activism ,STOCKHOLDER wealth ,GOLD mining ,GOLD industry ,LAND use - Abstract
In the context of the rising incidence of displacement and land use conflicts over resource extraction, this article draws attention to changes in the extractive practices of the gold mining industry as a consequence of financialisation. Through a close study of the Pascua Lama gold project in Chile and Argentina, I examine how the industry's adoption of shareholder value maximisation has mobilised alternative forms of rural arrangements between land, resources, labour, and capital conducive to the extraction of financial value. Such strategy, I find, has altered the scale and pace of mineral development and heightened the disruptions conventionally associated with commodity price cycles. The paper contributes to advancing existing understandings of financialisation as a key driver of agrarian and rural transformations within critical agrarian studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The ethics of competition: accountability policy enactment in Chilean schools' everyday life.
- Author
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Falabella, Alejandra
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL accountability ,EVERYDAY life ,EDUCATION policy ,SCHOOL administration - Abstract
Public policies have a moral order, an ethical horizon. They offer a vocabulary of imagined micro-policies. Using the case of Chile, this paper examines the ways in which accountability policies are reworked within schools and how they affect actors' subjectivities. It adds new findings to the existing body of research on school accountability policies, offering in-depth evidence based on the case of Chile, which has a high-stakes testing model and a widespread competitive voucher system. The research is based on case studies of ten public and private subsidised schools, framed by a sociological perspective of policy enactment theory. The research findings show the ways that accountability policies are recreated, expanded, and intensified at the local level, permeating an ethic of competition. The analysis focuses on three qualitative trends: school actors' sense-making of test scores and labels; zones of safety and risk for teachers under an accountability regime; and the emergence of a sticky web of persuasion, surveillance, and coercion among school members in order to improve performance. The practices examined are not understood as 'secondary effects' or an 'implementation problem', as if they occur unconnected from the policy rationale. The outcomes are consistent with the policy itself in interaction with school life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Welcome to Santiago. Commercial aviation relations between Chile and the socialist countries, 1970–1973.
- Author
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Barría Traverso, Diego and Carreño Lara, Eduardo
- Subjects
- *
COMMERCIAL aeronautics , *SOCIALIST societies , *AIR travel , *CONTRACTS , *MAPUCHE (South American people) ,COMMUNIST countries - Abstract
This study analyses why Cuba, the Soviet Union, Bulgaria and Czechoslovakia attempted to establish air transport agreements with Chile, as well as their objectives and those of their airlines. It also examines the response of the Allende government and other Chilean key actors. The paper shows that the interest in signing these agreements lay in the Socialist bloc countries. Their reasons varied depending on their particular situation and foreign policy goals. By contrast, Chile saw the negotiation of agreements as a means of strengthening its ties with the Soviet bloc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Weakening Practices Amidst Progressive Laws: Refugee Governance in Latin America during COVID-19.
- Author
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Zapata, Gisela P., Gandini, Luciana, Espinoza, Marcia Vera, and Rosas, Victoria Prieto
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *REFUGEES , *REFUGEE children - Abstract
This paper develops a comparative assessment of the state of asylum in Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and Uruguay. It argues that an accelerated weakening of refugee protection, exacerbated during the pandemic, has taken place across the region. Faced with growing mixed flows, the region’s refugee framework has either been used as an ad hoc regularization mechanism or not been broadly used. Also, pandemic mitigation measures have further weakened access to asylum, through militarization and border closures, and a platitude of deterrence practices. These regressive practices may result in the undermining, abandonment and/or replacement of the region’s widely praised refugee governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Normative violence and the terms of recognizability as 'woman' in Chilean Catholic schools.
- Author
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Errázuriz, Valentina, Lami, Camila, and Rodríguez, Camila
- Subjects
CATHOLIC schools ,HETEROSEXUAL mothers ,WOMEN'S health ,SEX discrimination in employment - Abstract
In this article, we analyze our individually written testimonios and group conversations about our experience as 'woman' in Catholic schools in Chile, using Butler's concept of performativity and Braidotti's concept of nomadic subjectivity. We argue that some Catholic schools in Chile reproduce the category 'woman' as a pure, selfless, sexy, heterosexual mother who is an inferior and erasable being that is frequently discounted. This reproduction is done via different procedures of shaming, silencing, and even sexual violence. We experienced the telling of these testimonios as troubling but productive. First, this paper addresses the ideologies, values, and practices that Catholic schools construct around gender. Second, it suggests that the telling of and engagement with stories of embodied experiences is a beneficial strategy to battle gender oppression and work through productive discomfort and affects. Finally, the article considers the importance of dismantling subjectivity formation processes that consider some bodies as disposable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. A new genus and two new species of land planarians (Platyhelminthes: Tricladida: Geoplanidae) from Southern Chile.
- Author
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Grau, José Horacio, Almeida, Ana Laura, Sluys, Ronald, and Carbayo, Fernando
- Subjects
PLATYHELMINTHES ,SPECIES ,ATRIUMS (Architecture) ,FIBERS ,ANATOMY - Abstract
The paper describes the new land planarian genus Mapuplana gen. nov. from Chile, on the basis of the two new species Mapuplana guttulata sp. nov. and M. fjordica sp. nov. The genus Mapuplana is mainly characterised by two putative apomorphies: a subneural parenchymal musculature consisting of diagonal decussate muscle fibres; and a blind duct opening sideways into the female atrium. The new species are very similar to each other in their general anatomy and differ only in details in the pattern of dorsal colouration, the relative distance between mouth and gonopore, the relative thickness of the ventral cutaneous musculature, the orientation of the gonoduct, and the shape of the female atrium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Museum-archived and recent acquisition nitrates from the Atacama Desert, Chile, South America: refinement of the dual isotopic compositions (δ15N vs. δ18O).
- Author
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Mizota, Chitoshi, Hansen, Robin, Hosono, Takahiro, and Okumura, Azusa
- Subjects
NITRATES ,NITROGEN isotopes ,SODIUM nitrate ,DESERTS ,STABLE isotopes - Abstract
Sodium nitrate ores from the Atacama Desert in South America were economically important as they represented huge natural resources for the fertilizer and explosives industries during the early nineteenth to early twentieth centuries. Nitrogen and oxygen isotope ratios (δ
15 N and δ18 O) of these desert nitrates generally show unique compositions (from close to 0 and up to ca. +50 ‰, respectively). The nitrates indicate the provenance as atmospheric in origin due to the mass-independent photochemical reaction of nitric oxide (NO) with ozone (O3 ) in the atmosphere to produce nitrate (NO3 – ). This paper examines the previously existing isotope data for specimens acquired from the Atacama Desert. It then reports new data from dual isotope analysis of historic nitrate specimens archived in museums in the UK. In the stable isotope signatures for nitrates from two areas of the Atacama Desert, Tarapacá in the north and Antofagasta in the south, were examined, and this analysis enabled a more detailed definition of their isotopic compositional ranges. This improved database is useful for tracing the provenance of the historic nitrates used in gunpowder and saltpetre, and also the cause of nitrate pollution in natural environments for which routine chemistry alone cannot provide the definite evidence for the origin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Nostalgias for a barrio: narratives of generational loss from Esperanza neighborhood in Valparaiso, Chile.
- Author
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Colin, Clément and Iturrieta Olivares, Sandra
- Subjects
NOSTALGIA ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,SOCIAL structure ,SOCIAL change ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
Copyright of Social & Cultural Geography is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The Role of Human Capital, Market Potential and Natural Amenities in Understanding Spatial Wage Disparities in Chile.
- Author
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Paredes, Dusan
- Subjects
HUMAN capital ,MARKET potential ,WAGE differentials ,NATURAL resources ,ECONOMIC geography ,RESOURCE-based communities ,LABOR economics - Abstract
This paper presents an empirical framework for analysing spatial wage inequality in Chile. Chile is primarily characterized by two stylized facts: the high spatial concentration around the metropolitan area and the key role of natural resources in the country. The paper considers both elements in a competition between NEG (new economic geography) and a theory based on natural resource endowment, with both theories incorporating human capital via a multilevel analysis. The results show the poor performance of NEG for Chile and indicate that natural resources are the principal cause of spatial wage variability in Chile. RÉSUMÉ La présente communication illustre un cadre d'analyse empirique de l'inégalité spatiale entre les salaires, au Chili. Le Chili est caractérisé principalement par les deux faits stylisés suivants : une concentration spatiale élevée autour de la zone métropolitaine, et le rôle essentiel que jouent les ressources naturelles dans ce pays. Cette communication se penche sur ces deux éléments dans le cadre d'une compétition entre deux théories : d'une part la nouvelle géographie économique (« NEG »), de l'autre une théorie fondée sur la dotation en ressources naturelles, ces deux théories incorporant le capital humain par le biais d'une analyse à multiples niveaux. Les résultats démontrent les mauvais résultats de NEG pour le Chili, et indiquent que les ressources naturelles sont la principale cause de la variabilité spatiale des salaires au Chili. EXTRACTO Este estudio presenta un marco empírico para analizar la desigualdad espacial de los salarios en Chile. Chile se caracteriza principalmente por dos hechos estilizados: la alta concentración espacial alrededor del área metropolitana y la función clave de los recursos naturales del país. El estudio considera ambos elementos en una competición entre la NEG (Nueva Geografía Económica) y una teoría basada en el legado de recursos naturales, donde ambas teorías incorporan el capital humano a través de un análisis de múltiples niveles. Los resultados muestran un bajo rendimiento de la NEG en relación con Chile e indican que los recursos naturales son la causa principal de la variabilidad espacial de los salarios en Chile. 摘要: 本文提出了一种分析智利区域工资不均的经验框架。智利主要有两大特点:大城市地区高度空间聚集和农村地区自然资源作用巨大。本文在对NEG (新经济地理学)和基于自然资源储藏量的理论进行比较时, 考虑了这两个因素, 同时还通过多层次分析纳入了人力资源因素。结果显示智利NEG性能很差, 表明智利区域工资差异的主要原因是自然资源。 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Problematizing markets: market failures and the government of collective concerns.
- Author
-
Ossandón, José and Ureta, Sebastián
- Subjects
MARKET failure ,NEOLIBERALISM - Abstract
Neoliberalism is usually associated with pro-market values. This paper argues that more attention should be paid to the specific forms of market criticisms that unfold in neoliberal settings. We adapt Foucault's and Callon's notion of problematization to study recent policy reforms in Chile. The analysis shows a transition from a set of policies justified in terms of the virtues of the market to policy interventions based on a comparison between the situation in the specific area and ideal well-functioning markets. This transition, we propose, signals a particular mode of governing with its characteristic cognitive operation (areas of collective concerns are assessed in terms of market failures), apparatus (policy instruments oriented to remediate market failures), and the jurisdiction of a particular type of experts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Advancing culturally relevant pedagogy in teacher education from a Chilean perspective: a multi-case study of secondary preservice teachers.
- Author
-
Peña-Sandoval, César
- Subjects
STUDENT teachers ,TEACHER education ,CULTURALLY relevant education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
This paper draws from a broader research project and reports on a qualitative multi-case study that investigated the learning experiences of seven Chilean teacher candidates during their practicum. The purpose was to know what they learned from students' contexts during their clinical experiences and how they used that knowledge in their teaching. Semi-structured interviews, class observations, and documents such as portfolios and lesson plans were used as primary sources. Culturally Relevant Pedagogy (CRP) was used as the theoretical framework. Findings show that building strong relationships with students was the main vehicle to develop socially and culturally responsive practices. Three contextual components (type of institution, students' backgrounds and diversity, and complexity and vulnerability of contexts) were identified as essential mediators for advancing a CRP approach. After providing insight on how the practicum shaped participants' thinking and teaching in ways that embody CRP, the paper addresses implications for initial teacher education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Chinese vs. US Trade in an Emerging Country: The Impact of Trade Openness in Chile.
- Author
-
Sotiriou, Alexandra and Rodríguez-Pose, Andrés
- Subjects
FREE trade ,COMMERCIAL treaties ,VALUE chains ,LABOR supply ,IMPORTS - Abstract
This paper explores the effects of import competition on the manufacturing sector in Chile following the implementation of the country's two largest Free Trade Agreements (FTA) (with the USA and China). Exploiting cross-industry variation in import exposure, we analyse the effects on manufacturing sales, employment and labour productivity at the finest level of industrial classification (4 digit ISIC level). We detect an overall negative effect of increased Chinese import penetration, owing to substitution effects from low and medium tech imports and a less pronounced effect from USA imports. By introducing interaction effects, we find that the levels of foreign ownership and the export intensity of the domestic industries reverse the negative effect due to the opportunities offered via participation in global value chains. An IV strategy is applied to address standard endogeneity concerns and confirm the robustness of our estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Staff perspectives on victimisation in multi-ethnic Chilean elementary schools.
- Author
-
Webb, Andrew
- Subjects
ELEMENTARY schools ,SCHOOL environment ,SOCIOLOGICAL research ,URBAN schools ,PUBLIC schools ,SCHOOL nursing - Abstract
This paper draws on qualitative interviews conducted with school staff in four multi-ethnic urban public schools in Santiago, Chile, to provide a sociological analysis of common-sense constructs surrounding victimisation. The questions guiding the study were to what extent school staff share similar perspectives toward victimisation (as demonstrative of a school culture), and how this impacts the capacity to generate positive school climates in multi-ethnic elementary urban schools in Santiago. Drawing on theories of school culture, I propose that staff members' abilities and willingness to identify and implement preventive measures in schools are collectively defined and legitimated. I demonstrate that this has important repercussions in contexts of higher-than-average ethnic compositions where assimilation is encouraged, and victimisation is denied or attributed to other causes. Symbolic and superficial celebrations of multiculturalism are common, but cultural discourses of difference maintain ethnic youth in marginalised positions and prevent more inclusive educational practices. Some staff perspectives adhere to colour-blind liberal forms of racism in these contexts, and these are most common in school cultures where victimisation is downplayed or thought to be an issue cultivated in the home. Recommendations are made to incorporate culturally-sensitive pedagogies and cultural mediators to confront these narratives among school climate committees. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Key operational and institutional factors for improving food safety: a case study from Chile.
- Author
-
Lu, Haiyan, Mangla, Sachin Kumar, Hernandez, Jorge E., Elgueta, Sebastian, Zhao, Guoqing, Liu, Shaofeng, and Hunter, Lise
- Subjects
FOOD safety ,FOOD supply management ,ANALYTIC hierarchy process ,STANDARD of living ,STANDARDIZATION ,SUPPLY chain management ,FOOD recall - Abstract
The worldwide demand for safe food is increased due to the population growth and the improvement of living standards. Different global standards are relevant in the food value chain including education and training of human resources, government regulations and surveillance. Different factors related to food safety risks in production can be taken into consideration in developing economies. Achieving food safety needs a highly integrated system in food supply and operations management. To meet demand for safe and higher quality food, food organisations especially in developing nations like Chile face numerous problematic issues. In terms of dynamic capabilities, this study takes account of supply chain re-conceptualisation, co-evolving and reflexive supply chain control. In this paper, we identify and prioritise key institutional and operational factors for improving the food safety in Chile. The factors were analysed using a Fuzzy analytic hierarchy process for illustrating the significance of key criteria to food safety concepts under uncertain environment. We provides a detailed and prioritised criteria for improving food safety practices, helping managers to understand the operational and institutional environment and makes a contribution to inform food organisations and government policy-making to reduce food losses and improve sustainability of food chains under fuzzy situations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Reassessing the Costs and Benefits of Imposing Capital Controls: The Case of Chile (1991-98).
- Author
-
Abbas, Syed Mohammad Ali
- Subjects
COST analysis ,CAPITAL movements ,CASE studies ,DEVELOPING countries ,FOREIGN exchange rates ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,ECONOMIC conditions in Chile - Abstract
This paper aims to highlight some of the less-mentioned costs and benefits of imposing capital controls (in particular, on inflows) in lower income countries (LICs). The impact of controls on the effectiveness of conventional policy tools, as well as the limitations of the latter, are studied in the context of Chile's imposition of unremunerated reserve requirements (URRs) in the early 1990s. Then, using better data and a slightly different specification from earlier studies, an error-correction model for Chile's real exchange rate (RER) is set up with a view to assessing controls' impact thereon. The key finding, contrary to earlier studies, is that controls did depreciate the real exchange rate in the short-run. At the same time, an enhanced controls variable ("the effective" tax implied by the reserve requirement, a la Gallego et al., 1999) was seen to possess an inverse relationship with the equilibrium real exchange rate, suggesting the possibility of controls having facilitated an equilibrium RER appreciation in the long-run. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Does forest matter regarding Chilean CO2 international abatement commitments? A multilevel decomposition approach.
- Author
-
Cansino, José M. and Moreno, Roberto
- Subjects
FOREST economics ,FORESTS & forestry ,CARBON dioxide & the environment - Abstract
This paper assesses the role of the forestry sector in the CO
2 -eq emissions change in Chile from 1990 to 2013. Due to its relevance, this sector is considered as a proxy LULUCF activities. A second objective of this paper is to explore whether the forestry sector has always contributed to a decoupling process between CO2 -eq emissions and economic growth. To address the first objective, the LMDI method has been used. For the second objective, the decoupling status between CO2 -eq emissions comes from the Tapio index, which was used for the first step. For the second step, a second level of decomposition was carried out. Major findings from the LMDI and second-level decomposition analysis reveal that Chile's forestry sector clearly acted as a sink but failed to outweigh the role played by all other sectors taken into consideration. The results show that Chile has also failed to reach decoupling between economic growth and CO2 -eq emissions. Efforts made in the forestry sector to reduce CO2 emissions were interesting but not strong enough to meet decoupling objectives. It is recommended that native forest management be reinforced and strengthened, mainly by reforestation with oak, raulí and coigüe varieties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. What is a land grab? Exploring green grabs, conservation, and private protected areas in southern Chile.
- Author
-
Holmes, George
- Subjects
REAL property acquisition ,PROTECTED areas ,NEOLIBERALISM ,CONSERVATION of natural resources ,CHILEAN history, 1810- ,GLOBALIZATION & society ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,FAMILIES ,HISTORY - Abstract
Discussions of land grabs for various purposes, including environmental ends, have expanded in recent years, yet land grabbing remains inconsistently defined and poorly understood. Our ability to assess the extent to which land grabs are occurring, and to identify the mixture of factors driving land and resource acquisition, is limited. This paper assesses whether a land grab for conservation is happening in southern Chile, and identifies the various driving forces that combine to drive land acquisitions in the region, based on a detailed exploration of the recent massive growth in privately owned protected areas in the region. This paper finds that the various dominant definitions of land grabs each apply only partially to southern Chile, that land grabs for conservation need to be understood as the latest stage in a longer process by which the region's natural resources are incorporated into the Chilean and the global economy, and that green grabs interact in various ways with broader resource grabs, particularly for forestry and hydroelectricity. This case study demonstrates the limitations of some definitions of land grabs, particularly their focus on capitalist accumulation within land grabs, their international nature and their emphasis on legal processes. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Household Financial Portfolios in an Emerging Economy—The Case of Chile.
- Author
-
Białowolski, Piotr and Chávez-Juárez, Florian
- Subjects
HOUSEHOLDS ,CONSOLIDATED financial statements ,INFORMAL sector ,BOND market ,SERVICE industries - Abstract
This paper investigates household financial portfolios in Chile. We use latent class models to identify groups of households according to their financial behavior. The model reveals nine distinct behavioral groups. The two largest groups account for 40% of the population and represent mostly households lacking access to banking sector services. Overall, we find strong evidence of households mixing assets and debt, which contradicts the classical assumptions of the life-cycle theory. We demonstrate that a significant share of indebted households has credit in the informal sector even though they were able to save on regular basis and thus should seek credit in the formal market. Education debt seems to be equally present among different socio-economic groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Chilean elite’s point of view on indigenous peoples.
- Author
-
de Cea, Maite, Heredia, Mariana, and Valdivieso, Diego
- Subjects
ELITE (Social sciences) ,MAPUCHE (South American people) ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,RACISM ,CHILEAN social conditions ,INDIGENOUS peoples of South America ,CIVIL rights ,TWENTY-first century ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Latin American & Caribbean Studies (Routledge) is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Sexual and dating violence among adolescents and young adults in Chile: a review of findings from a survey of university students.
- Author
-
Lehrer, JocelynA., Lehrer, EvelynL., and Koss, MaryP.
- Subjects
DATING violence ,COLLEGE students ,SEXUAL abuse victims ,CRIMES against students - Abstract
Copyright of Culture, Health & Sexuality is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. 'Iñche kai che': settler colonialism and erasing the past in Gülumapu/Chile.
- Author
-
Sauer, Jacob J.
- Subjects
- *
COLONIES , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *MAPUCHE (South American people) , *COMMUNITIES , *COLONISTS , *ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
Setter colonialism is dedicated to the elimination of the native, not just from territory but from the past. This form of elimination comes from the mistranslation or misunderstanding of names and terms that identify individuals and communities, which the colonists then use to separate Indigenous peoples from their own pasts. Many researchers have argued that the modern Mapuche are the result of ethnogenesis in the late eighteenth century, in part from misuse of the Mapuche language mapuzugun in describing communities in the past. This paper argues that, based on ethnographic, archaeological, and historic evidence, Che is the correct autonym to use for the Indigenous inhabitants of Wajmapu, the territory comprised of southern Chile and western Argentina, before the Che themselves began using the autonym Mapuche in the eighteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Re-signifying and negotiating indigenous identity in university spaces: a qualitative study from Chile.
- Author
-
Webb, Andrew and Sepúlveda, Denisse
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS universities & colleges ,HIGHER education of indigenous peoples ,EDUCATION ,STUDENT participation ,DISCRIMINATION in higher education - Abstract
This article draws on life history interviews with Indigenous university students in Chile to demonstrate the ways these young people re-signify and negotiate their participation in higher education. International scholarship has emphasized the unequal conditions for minority groups to access higher education, but attention also needs to be given to the ways students forge new identity pathways for themselves within these racialized environments. Our analysis utilizes LatCrit studies to emphasize how marginal and hybrid identities enable forms of resistance and counter-narratives to dominant (white) ideologies and assimilatory practices. We focus on the concept of community cultural wealth and the empowerment that aspirational and resistant capital can give to Indigenous youth, providing alternative motives for their studies in relation to the Indigenous communities to which they belong. The paper contributes to this scholarship by underscoring positive aspects of Indigenous student resistance and agency from an understudied context in Latin America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Service life prediction and environmental exposure conditions of timber claddings in South Chile.
- Author
-
Prieto, A. J. and Silva, A.
- Subjects
SERVICE life ,ENVIRONMENTAL exposure ,TIMBER ,NUCLEAR fuel claddings ,BUILDING design & construction ,PREFABRICATED buildings ,SOLAR radiation - Abstract
In this research, a methodology for the service life prediction of external timber claddings is proposed and discussed. The proposed model is based on the visual assessment of 110 timber claddings, subjected to real exposure conditions. The claddings under analysis belong to 80 buildings, with and without heritage characteristics, located in Valdivia and Niebla, South Chile. Timber claddings are a relevant symbol of the local identity of this region, portraying a complexity of ideas and cultural values, inherited by Spanish and German colonizations. The main anomalies that can occur in these claddings are translated into a numerical index, which describes the overall degradation condition of a timber façade. This work also discusses the influence of the local climate and environmental exposure conditions, considering biotic factors (fungi, insects, moulds, algae and bacteria) and abiotic factors (water, solar radiation, amplitude of temperature, physical damage) in the evolution of the degradation condition of timber claddings. The scarcity of funds in Chile to maintain and preserve the constructions and its components needs a more rational approach to decision-making concerning inspection, maintenance and rehabilitation procedures. The expeditious tool proposed in this paper may help in providing the basis for rational decision-making by professionals in practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Responsible research and innovation (RRI) in Chile: from a neostructural productivist imperative to sustainable regional development?
- Author
-
Barton, Jonathan R., Román, Álvaro, and Rehner, Johannes
- Subjects
RURAL development ,SUSTAINABLE development ,NATURAL resources ,INVESTMENT policy ,POLICY sciences - Abstract
This paper addresses the nature of Chilean investment in science, research and innovation and how this feeds into a broader narrative of productivist versus regional development, with a particular focus on natural resources. The concept of neostructuralism is employed to describe this productivist public sector support for investment in science and policy in relation to socio-economic and environmental research. Against this productivist perspective, a responsible research and innovation (RRI) approach is highlighted which is characterized by contextual, geographical relevance rather than generic solutions: sustainable regional development. Examples are drawn from mining and aquaculture to provide sectoral detail of this productivist logic: the case of mining reveals the focus on generating a cluster while the dimensions of indigenous conflicts and water stress are left to critical social sciences, while aquaculture provides examples of state support for aquaculture promotion with comparatively little investment in impact studies and conflicts. The conclusions point to a strong bias in science and development policy towards product innovation and the protagonism of the private sector allied with science policy support, while sustainable regional development and the role of the decentralized public sector is relegated to a more marginal field of 'critical' research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Rural entrepreneurship in place: an integrated framework.
- Author
-
Muñoz, Pablo and Kimmitt, Jonathan
- Subjects
ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,HUMAN geography - Abstract
Agglomeration-oriented theories have grown significantly in the past decade in the explanation and promotion of entrepreneurship. Theoretical frameworks and normative models such as entrepreneurial ecosystems are insufficient to observe, explain, and inform policies at the communal level in rural contexts. In this paper, we propose a socio-spatial lens as a more fruitful way of understanding the holistic picture of rural entrepreneurship. By means of abductive research, we explore the distinct elements of entrepreneurial places in rural contexts and derive an integrated meso-level framework, comprising place-sensitive determinations and dimensions, to observe and further analyse the enabling conditions of such places. The findings obtained and the framework developed will be of great use for the evaluation and decision-making, regarding entrepreneurship in rural communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Bringing water markets down to Chile’s Atacama Desert.
- Author
-
Prieto, Manuel
- Subjects
WATER rights ,WATER ,FREE enterprise ,NEOLIBERALISM ,WATER distribution ,INDIGENOUS peoples of South America ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The Chilean water model has been described as a textbook example of a successful free water market system. This paper analyses water-rights transactions to determine how this water market has behaved in the northern Atacama Desert. It questions the neoliberal assumption that Chile’s unregulated water market has acted as an active tool to reallocate water towards uses that provide the highest economic value. Instead, it argues that the state is the central actor in water allocation. This problematizes the notion that the Chilean water model is one of the most unregulated in the world. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Constituency Service and Representation: The Effects of Remoteness and Social Deprivation.
- Author
-
Dockendorff, Andrés and Lodato, Simón
- Subjects
CONSTITUENTS (Persons) ,LEGISLATORS - Abstract
This note examines and tests the determinants of constituency service in the Chilean Chamber of Deputies. We argue that socio-demographic factors lead towards differences in the provision of constituency service. We use a new data set of meetings between legislators, constituents, and groups to provide evidence for two main hypotheses. First, Chilean deputies from more remote districts devote a higher proportion of their meetings to addressing local or personal issues from constituents (Centre-Periphery Hypothesis). Second, deputies from districts in worse socio-economic situations also provide relatively more constituency services of this type (Social Deprivation Hypothesis). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Glacial geomorphology of the Marinelli and Pigafetta glaciers, Cordillera Darwin Icefield, southernmost Chile.
- Author
-
Izagirre, Eñaut, Darvill, Christopher M., Rada, Camilo, and Aravena, Juan Carlos
- Subjects
GEOMORPHOLOGY ,GLACIERS ,GEOLOGICAL mapping - Abstract
This paper presents a glacial geomorphological map relating to two rapidly receding glaciers in the Cordillera Darwin Icefield. The Marinelli marine-terminating glacier and Pigafetta freshwater-terminating glacier are selected to represent different glacial regimes producing different geomorphological records under similar climatic conditions. We combine mapping from satellite and aerial imagery with fieldwork, updating limited previous mapping. The map reveals two principal glacial landform assemblages: (1) a marine-terminating system, dominated by the formation of a large arcuate terminal morainic complex, glaciolacustrine landforms (shorelines) and extended ice-contact topography in the Fiordo Marinelli area; and (2) an assemblage of sequential frontal moraine ridges and outwash plains that formed when the former land-terminating Pigafetta glacier retreated from the Bahía Ainsworth area. Finally, the map is designed as a basis for future chronological campaigns and to enable a refined reconstruction of the glacial history of these two glaciers in a climatologically significant part of the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Closing the gap between business undergraduate education and the organisational environment: A Chilean case study applying experiential learning theory.
- Author
-
Valenzuela, Leslier, Jerez, Oscar M., Hasbún, Beatriz A., Pizarro, Verónica, Valenzuela, Gabriela, and Orsini, César A.
- Subjects
BUSINESS education ,PROBLEM-based learning ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,HIGHER education ,SERVICE learning ,PERFORMANCE tasks (Education) ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior ,CHANGE management ,INTEGRATED learning systems ,COMPUTER software ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
In response to the continuous changes in Latin American higher education and the increasing demands for better prepared professionals, the Learning Connected to the Organisational Environment method was introduced in the course of Marketing at one public University in Chile. This was aimed as an integrated approach to education, providing pedagogical and social value by connecting organisations and real challenges with the learning objectives. This paper describes its design, implementation and initial impact on students’ learning process. Results on the impact of the LCOE method show that students valued learning with this new initiative (n = 158) and showed higher performance and improved quality of their written reports, along with higher evaluations of the teaching staff compared to students in the same course learning with traditional methods (n = 158). Discussion is centred on the value of this initiative and on suggestions for transference and future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. ‘Because in Chile [carbon] markets work!’ Exploring an experimental implementation of an emissions trading scheme to deal with industrial air pollution in Santiago.
- Author
-
Ureta, Sebastián
- Subjects
EMISSIONS trading ,AIR pollution ,POLLUTION - Abstract
Emissions trading schemes have gained an important degree of momentum in recent years, rapidly becoming mainstream solutions to deal with the negative environmental consequences of human activity such as pollution and global warming. However there is still little empirical knowledge about what specific kind ofworkemissions trading schemes do. Using the analytical tools provided by science and technology studies, especially developments studying markets and economic practices, this paper looks to contribute to filling this void by exploring three kinds of work that emissions trading schemes might do: performing atextbookmarket of emissions permits, performing acivilizedmarket in which a multitude of heterogeneous actors participate and asexemplarsof the validity of certain economic knowledge. In order to explore the usability of this conceptualization the paper will then analyze one of earliest concrete implementations of this device: an emissions trading scheme introduced to deal with industrial air pollution in the city of Santiago (Chile) in the early 1990s. Through a historical genealogy, it will show this emissions trading schemeworkingnot mainly as a textbook market, but as a civilized one and as a powerful exemplar that helped to mobilizebothcommand-and-control regulation and neoliberal environmental economics to/from Chile and elsewhere. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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