Results for 'Padang Guatemala'

144 found
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  1.  10
    Guatemala City in the Age of Neoliberalism.J. T. Way - 2014 - Human Rights Review 15 (1):97-102.
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  2. Women in Guatemala’s Metropolitan Area: Violence, Law, and Social Justice.Paula Godoy-Paiz - 2008 - Studies in Social Justice 2 (1):27-47.
    In this article I examine the legal framework for addressing violence against women in post war Guatemala. Since the signing of the Peace Accords in 1996, judicial reform in Guatemala has included the passing of laws in the area of women‘s human rights, aimed at eliminating discrimination and violence against women. These laws constitute a response to and have occurred concurrently to an increase in violent crime against women, particularly in the form of mass rapes and murders. Drawing (...)
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  3.  63
    Imagining Social Justice amidst Guatemala’s Post-Conflict Violence.M. Gabriela Torres - 2008 - Studies in Social Justice 2 (1):1-11.
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  4. Colombia y Guatemala: Paralelos de una violencia sin tregua, de memorias que comienzan.Marda Zuluaga Aristizábal - 2012 - Aletheia: Anuario de Filosofía 3 (5):8 - 12.
    Este artículo propone analizar comparativamente la guerra, el conflicto y la violencia, en Colombia y Guatemala, ya que han tomado formas específicas y el papel que el Estado ha jugado en ellos ha tenido también sus matices. También tratará sobre las diversas versiones del conflicto y las maneras de recordarlo.
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  5. El positivismo en Guatemala.Amurrio González & Jesús Juliaán - 1966 - Guatemala,: Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala.
     
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  6. Southern mexico and guatemala: In my hill, in my valley : The importance of place in ancient Maya ritual.James E. Brady - 2003 - In Douglas Sharon & James Edward Brady (eds.), Mesas & Cosmologies in Mesoamerica. San Diego Museum of Man.
  7. Crónica científico-social de Guatemala.A. C. SuÁrez - 1931 - Ciencia Tomista 44:122-127.
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  8.  12
    Philosophy Students in Guatemala.A. Gray Thompson - 1988 - Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 7 (3):29-30.
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  9.  40
    Agroecology from the ground up: a critical analysis of sustainable soil management in the highlands of Guatemala.Nathan Einbinder, Helda Morales, Mateo Mier Y. Terán Giménez Cacho, Bruce G. Ferguson, Miriam Aldasoro & Ronald Nigh - 2022 - Agriculture and Human Values 39 (3):979-996.
    A persistent problem in the dominant agricultural development model is the imposition of technologies without regard to local processes and cultures. Even with the recent shift towards sustainability and agroecology, initiatives continue to overlook local knowledge. In this article we provide analysis of agroecological soil management in the Maya-Achi territory of Guatemala. The Achí, subject to five decades of interventions and development, present an interesting case study for assessing the complementarities and tensions between traditional, generally preventative practices and external (...)
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  10.  82
    Corporeal Dimensions of Gender Violence: Ladina’s Self and Body in Eastern Guatemala.Cecilia Menjívar - 2008 - Studies in Social Justice 2 (1):12-26.
    Based on 30 in-depth interviews with Ladina women and field work conducted in a rural town in eastern Guatemala, I examine the physical expressions that violence can take on the women's bodies, such as common physical ailments that result from emotional distress as well as sicknesses that are caused directly by the conditions in which they live. A central theme in the discussion is the embodiment of violence as it is expressed in the control of the women's body in (...)
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  11. Helping while studying people: Guatemala.Robert E. Hinshaw - 2012 - In Darby C. Stapp (ed.), Action anthropology and Sol Tax in 2012: the final word? Richland, WA: JONA.
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  12.  8
    Compensation and reparations for victims and bystanders of the U.S. Public Health Service research studies in Tuskegee and Guatemala: Who do we owe what?Susan M. Reverby - 2020 - Bioethics 34 (9):893-898.
    Using the infamous research studies in Tuskegee and Guatemala, the article examines the difference between victims and bystanders. The victims can include families, sexual partners, and children not just the participants. There are also the bystanders in the populations who are affected, even vaguely, decades after the initial studies took place. Differing reparations for victims and bystanders through lawsuits and historical acknowledgments has to be part of broader discussions of historical justice, and the weighing of the impact of racism (...)
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  13. Who’s Sorry Now? Government Apologies, Truth Commissions, and Indigenous Self-Determination in Australia, Canada, Guatemala, and Peru.Jeff Corntassel & Cindy Holder - 2008 - Human Rights Review 9 (4):465-489.
    Official apologies and truth commissions are increasingly utilized as mechanisms to address human rights abuses. Both are intended to transform inter-group relations by marking an end point to a history of wrongdoing and providing the means for political and social relations to move beyond that history. However, state-dominated reconciliation mechanisms are inherently problematic for indigenous communities. In this paper, we examine the use of apologies, and truth and reconciliation commissions in four countries with significant indigenous populations: Canada, Australia, Peru, and (...)
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  14. Le pentecôtisme au Guatemala.Bon de Commande - 2001 - Revue D'Histoire Et de Philosophie Religieuses 81:385.
  15.  7
    Global Governance and Labor Rights: Codes of Conduct and Anti-Sweatshop Struggles in Global Apparel Factories in Mexico and Guatemala.César A. Rodríguez-Garavito - 2005 - Politics and Society 33 (2):203-333.
    Monitoring systems have recently arisen to verify compliance with corporate codes of conduct for labor. This article places codes in the context of broader debates on global governance and argues for an empowered participatory approach to international labor standards focusing on enabling rights. Based on ethnographic research in Mexico and Guatemala on the implementation of codes in the apparel sector and their use in cross-border organizing campaigns, it explores the effect of monitoring on worker empowerment and working conditions in (...)
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  16.  7
    Permanent Counterinsurgency in Guatemala.K. Anderson & J. -M. Simon - 1987 - Télos 1987 (73):9-46.
  17.  32
    Effective Reparation for the Guatemala S.T.D. Experiments: A Victim-Centered Approach.Bethany Spielman - 2018 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 28 (2):145-170.
    In 2010, historian Susan Reverby made public her discovery of the now notorious U.S.–Guatemalan S.T.D. experiments. More than 1300 Guatemalans had been intentionally exposed to syphilis, gonorrhea, and/or canchroid in nonconsensual experiments funded by Johns Hopkins, the Rockefeller Foundation, Bristol Myers-Squibb, and Mead Johnson and carried out by the U.S.P.H.S and Guatemalan health officials in collaboration with the Pan American Health Organization in 1946–48. The purpose of the experiments was to help develop more effective means of preventing and diagnosing STDs. (...)
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  18.  14
    Lived Temporalities: Exploring Duration in Guatemala. Empirical and Theoretical Studies.Julia Mahler - 2008 - Columbia University Press.
    The book offers an empirical exploration of lived temporalities on markets, in buses and in traditional subsistence in Guatemala, and a theoretical exploration of these through the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze and inter-relational ...
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  19.  13
    The Architecture of Appearance: Arendt’s Feminism and Guatemala’s Private City.Katherine Davies - 2020 - Arendt Studies 4:53-82.
    Ciudad Cayalá in Guatemala brands itself as the country’s first private city. I turn to Hannah Arendt to show how and why Cayalá does not and cannot provide the space of appearance she argues is needed to support the possibility of political action. I show how Arendt provides two apparently distinct phenomenological accounts in The Human Condition—one historically-oriented and the other politically-oriented—that articulate how Cayalá fails in its aspiration to privatize the political. Yet the apparent divergence between her accounts (...)
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  20.  40
    Ladino and Q'eqchí Maya land use and land clearing in the Sierra de Lacandón National Park, Petén, Guatemala.David L. Carr - 2004 - Agriculture and Human Values 21 (2/3):171-179.
    This paper examines potential differences in land use between Q'eqchí Maya and Ladino farmers in a remote agricultural frontier in northern Petén, Guatemala. The research site, the Sierra de Lacandón National Park, is a core conservation zone of Guatemala's Maya Biosphere Reserve. In recent years, much has been written about the dramatic process of colonization and deforestation in Petén, Guatemala's largest and northernmost department. Since the early 1980s a rapid rural transformation has occurred where once remote forested (...)
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  21. Bibliografía filosófica de publicaciones de las Universidades de Costa Rica y San Carlos de Guatemala y de autores guatemaltecos que exhibió la Biblioteca Nacional.Bendfeldt Rojas & Lourdes[From Old Catalog] - 1964 - [Guatemala]: Edited by Calderón de Muñoz, Alba Rosa & [From Old Catalog].
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  22.  29
    Negotiating Citizenship in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala.Juanita Sundberg - 2012 - In Alex Latta & Hannah Wittman (eds.), Environment and citizenship in Latin America: natures, subjects and struggles. New York: Berghahn Books. pp. 101--97.
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  23.  22
    Structural and Interpersonal Benefits and Risks of Participation in HIV Research: Perspectives of Female Sex Workers in Guatemala.Shira M. Goldenberg, Monica Rivera Mindt, Teresita Rocha Jimenez, Kimberly Brouwer, Sonia Morales Miranda & Celia B. Fisher - 2015 - Ethics and Behavior 25 (2):97-114.
    This study explored perceived benefits and risks of participation in HIV research among 33 female sex workers in Tecún Umán, Guatemala. Stigma associated with sex work and HIV was a critical barrier to research participation. Key benefits of participation included access to HIV/sti prevention and testing, as well as positive and trusting relationships between sex workers and research teams. Control exerted by managers had mixed influences on perceived research risks and benefits. Results underscore the critical need for HIV investigators (...)
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  24. Philosophy for Children: A Vehicle for Promoting Democracy in Guatemala.A. Gray Thompson & Eugenio Echeverria - 1987 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 8 (1).
    The Central American country of Guatemala committed itself to democratic values and processes in its election of December, 1985. Guatemala, like most other Central American countries, has been through the dictator-constitution-election revolving door many times. For almsot half a century, Guatemala has been afflicted with coups, general-presidents and dictator-presidents. Again, in 1985, Guatemala created a new constitution with provision for democratic presidential elections monitored and declared "democratic" by a score of other nations. The new president, Vinicio (...)
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  25.  24
    The rights and wrongs of intentional exposure research: contextualising the Guatemala STD inoculation study.Holly Fernandez Lynch - 2012 - Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (8):513-515.
    In its recent review of the US Public Health Service Sexually Transmitted Disease Inoculation Study, conducted in Guatemala from 1946 to 1948, the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues identified a number of egregious ethical violations, but failed to adequately address issues associated with the intentional exposure research design in particular. As a result, a common public misconception that the study was wrong because researchers purposefully infected their subjects has been left standing. In fact, human subjects have (...)
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  26.  9
    A Personal View: Navigating conflicting claims of legality and women’s safety at a volunteer medical clinic in Guatemala.Ellery Altshuler - 2020 - Developing World Bioethics 21 (3):123-124.
    Developing World Bioethics, Volume 21, Issue 3, Page 123-124, September 2021.
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  27. Berechnungen der moralischen Effizienz zweier wohltätiger Projekte – Kinderheim in Guatemala vs. Malariaprophylaxe. Anhang zu: Wie effizient sollen Altruisten handeln?Christoph Lumer - 2021 - Publications of Christoph Lumer.
    This is an appendix to the article "Wie effizient sollten Altruisten handeln?" ("How Efficient Should Altruists Act?") The appendix provides detailed moral efficiency calculations for two charitable projects: a children's home in Guatemala for neglected children versus malaria prevention by distributing mosquito nets in malaria areas in sub-Saharan Africa. The exact method of efficiency calculation is explained and applied. At least prima facie, the malaria prophylaxis project is clearly more efficient.
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  28.  44
    History, Ethics and the Presidential Commission on Research in Guatemala.Barry Lyons - 2014 - Public Health Ethics 7 (3):211-224.
    In 2010, President Obama instructed the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues to enquire into research carried out by the US Public Health Service in Guatemala between 1946 and 1948. These studies entailed the deliberate inoculation of unconsenting prisoners, mental asylum patients and soldiers, with venereal disease. There was also evidence of deception and secrecy. The Commission’s report describes the research as heinous, egregious, unconscionable and unjustifiable, and identified those responsible as morally blameworthy. However, this article argues (...)
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  29. Red and green all over: counterinsurgency and conservation in the jungles of Cold War Guatemala.Tony Andersson - 2019 - In Stephen Brain & Viktor Pál (eds.), Environmentalism under authoritarian regimes: myth, propaganda, reality. New York, NY: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group/Earthscan from Routledge.
     
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  30. So what?" : historical contingency, activism, and reflections on the studies in Tuskegee and Guatemala.Susan M. Reverby - 2018 - In Françoise Baylis & Alice Domurat Dreger (eds.), Bioethics in action. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  31.  21
    “Something of an Adventure”: Postwar NIH Research Ethos and the Guatemala STD Experiments.Kayte Spector-Bagdady & Paul A. Lombardo - 2013 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 41 (3):697-710.
    The STD experiments in Guatemala from 1946–1948 have earned a place of infamy in the history of medical ethics. But if the Guatemala STD experiments were so “ethically impossible,” how did the U.S. government approve their funding? Although much of the literature has targeted the failings of Dr. John Cutler, we focus on the institutional context and research ethos that shaped the outcome of the research. After the end of WWII, Dr. Cassius Van Slyke reconstructed the federal research (...)
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  32.  67
    Energy, Complexity, and Strategies of Evolution: As Illustrated by Maya Indians of Guatemala.Richard N. Adams - 2010 - World Futures 66 (7):470-503.
  33.  7
    Anna Guerra de Jesús: Hagiografía, confesión y pugnas por el fuero interno en el Reino de Guatemala durante el siglo XVIII.Ricardo Roque Baldovinos - 2019 - ÍSTMICA Revista de la Facultad de Filosofía y Letras 1 (23):53.
    Este trabajo propone una lectura de la Vida admirable y prodigiosas virtudes de la sierva de Dios Doña Ana Guerra de Jesús (Guatemala, 1716) del jesuita Antonio de Siria, texto escrito para sustentar la posible canonización de Ana Guerra de Jesús. Aun cuando la hagiografía sea un género didáctico de propósito religioso y, por ende, sin una intencionalidad “estética”, su estudio permite entender los procesos culturales del momento. El análisis de los dispositivos narrativos y estilísticos, muestra la fina escenificación (...)
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  34.  52
    Diversity in family planning use among ethnic groups in guatemala.Sofie de Broe, Andrew Hinde, Zoë Matthews & Sabu S. Padmadas - 2005 - Journal of Biosocial Science 37 (3):301-317.
    This study investigates the ethnic differentials in contraceptive use in the north-eastern Ch’orti area of Guatemala, a region dominated by the Ladino culture. Data come from a household survey and in-depth interviews with service providers carried out in 2001 in the town of Jocotán, and a survey carried out in 1994 in two nearby indigenous villages (aldeas). Descriptive analysis and logistic regression are used to explore the data. Previous DHS surveys have used dress and language to classify ethnic groups. (...)
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  35.  11
    “Si Nicaragua venció, el Salvador vencerá y Guatemala seguirá”: relaciones entre el FSLN, el FMLN y la URNG en la década de los ochenta del siglo xx.Fernando Harto de Vera & Abelardo Morales Gamboa - 2022 - Araucaria 24 (50).
    The triumph of the Sandinista Revolution on July 19, 1979 marked the beginning of a period of intensification of the struggle of the insurgent movements in El Salvador and Guatemala that, encouraged by the victory of their Sandinista comrades, tried to emulate the defeat of the oligarchy in their respective countries. Nicaragua acquired a relevant role as it had not had in the region until then, becoming one of the actors that would mark the course of the isthmus during (...)
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  36.  20
    The Soul of Development: Biblical Christianity and Economic Transformation in Guatemala.Amy L. Sherman - 1996 - Oxford University Press USA.
    Ever since Max Weber started an argument about the role of Protestantism in jump-starting northern Europe's economic development, scholars have clashed over the influence of religion and culture on a society's economic prospects. Today, many wonder whether the "explosion" of Protestantism in Latin America will effect a similar wave of growth and democratization. In this book, Sherman compiles the results of her field study and national survey of 1000 rural Guatemalan households. She offers persuasive evidence that, in Guatemala and (...)
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  37.  92
    Use of the Labour-Intensive Method in the Repair of a Rural Road Serving an Indigenous Community in Jocotán (Guatemala).Rodrigo Ares, José-María Fuentes, Eutiquio Gallego, Francisco Ayuga & Ana-Isabel García - 2012 - Science and Engineering Ethics 18 (2):315-338.
    Abstract This paper reports the results obtained in an aid project designed to improve transport in the municipal area of Jocotán (Guatemala). The rural road network of an area occupied by indigenous people was analysed and a road chosen for repair using the labour-intensive method–something never done before in this area. The manpower required for the project was provided by the population that would benefit from the project; the involvement of outside contractors and businesses was avoided. All payment for (...)
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  38.  3
    Introducing Technology in Science Education: The Case of Guatemala.Fernando Cajas - 1998 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 18 (3):194-203.
    In this article, the author studies the introduction of technology into the science curriculum. He offers a general framework for analyzing technology as artifact, knowledge, and social practice. This framework provides analytical tools to study the implications of technology in general education. The analysis is framed using two events: (a) the current movement of scientific literacy, which now includes technology literacy such as in the case of Project 2061, a science education initiative of the American Association for the Advancement of (...)
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  39.  20
    Determinants of Agricultural Intensity Index “Scores” in a Frontier Region: An Analysis of Data from Northern Guatemala[REVIEW]Avrum J. Shriar - 2005 - Agriculture and Human Values 22 (4):395-410.
    Data on farming systems in Petén, Guatemala, were used to develop an agricultural intensity index. The index can be used to assign an intensity “score” to a given farming system based on the array of practices used by the farmer, each practice’s contribution to production intensity, and the scale at which these practices are used. The scores assigned to 118 farmers in three study areas in Petén were analyzed through analysis of variance (ANOVA) to identify the factors that account (...)
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  40.  12
    Public Health Service Research in Guatemala: Toward New Scholarship.Kayte Spector-Bagdady - 2013 - Hastings Center Report 43 (4):3-3.
    A commentary on “‘Ever Vigilant’ in ‘Ethically Impossible’: Structural Injustice and Responsibility in PHS Research in Guatemala,” from the May‐June 2013 issue.
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  41.  13
    “Something of an Adventure”: Postwar NIH Research Ethos and the Guatemala STD Experiments.Kayte Spector-Bagdady & Paul A. Lombardo - 2013 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 41 (3):697-710.
    Since their revelation to the public, the sexually transmitted disease experiments in Guatemala from 1946 to 1948 have earned a place of infamy in the history of medical ethics. During these experiments, Public Health Service researchers intentionally exposed over 1,300 non-consenting Guatemalan soldiers, prisoners, psychiatric patients, and commercial sex workers to gonorrhea, syphilis, and/or chancroid under conditions that have shocked the medical community and public alike. Expert analysis has found little scientific value to the experiments as measured by current (...)
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  42. Imaginarios sociales en la reproducción de la violencia: Aproximación a la identidad del indio y el ladino en Guatemala.Lina Constanza Díaz Boada - 2012 - Aletheia: Anuario de Filosofía 3 (5):16 - 18.
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  43.  58
    Adaptations of Christianity Among the Jacalteca Indians of Guatemala.Oliver LaFarge - 1927 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 2 (3):476-495.
  44.  9
    In this chapter I aim to demonstrate the necessity of ethnographic research for the study of resources for indirect stancetaking and how they are deployed in naturally occurring speech situations through an account of a family of modal constructions in Sakapultek, a Mayan language spoken in highland Guatemala. 1 The constructions in question share many characteristics with constructions that have been analyzed as ironic in English, and I dub them “moral irony,” due both to their similarities to irony.Robin Shoaps - forthcoming - Stance: Sociolinguistic Perspectives: Sociolinguistic Perspectives.
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  45. Toward a culture of peace and nonviolence in postwar Guatemala.R. J. Rafael Escobar - 2007 - In R. Carroll, M. Daniel & Jacqueline E. Lapsley (eds.), Character ethics and the Old Testament: moral dimensions of Scripture. Westminster John Knox Press.
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  46. Enduring Violence: Ladina Women’s Lives in Guatemala.[author unknown] - 2011
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  47.  13
    Postconflicto: cómo se silencia y tergiversa el pasado. El caso de Guatemala.Carlos Sabino - 2016 - Dialogos 20 (2):30.
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  48. Historia Moderna de la Etnicidad En Guatemala la Visi'on Hegem'onica : De 1944 Al Presente.Oswaldo Salazar - 1996 - Universidad Rafael Landâivar, Instituto de Investigaciones Econâomicas y Sociales.
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  49.  15
    Buried secrets. Truth and human rights in Guatemala: Victoria Sanford , 2004. 352 pp. $19.95.Jennifer Schirmer - 2004 - Human Rights Review 6 (1):121-122.
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  50. Universal and sustainable human rights? Special tribunals in Guatemala.Jennifer Schirmer - 1997 - In Richard Wilson (ed.), Human Rights, Culture and Context: Anthropological Perspectives. Pluto Press. pp. 161--86.
     
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