檢索結果 - "land reform"
在您的搜尋 主題建議
在您的搜尋 主題建議
- 20th Century 2
- México 2
- siglo XX 2
- 1926 Forest Code 1
- Actividad política 1
- Aspectos sociales 1
- Campesinos 1
- Constitución de 1917 1
- Constitution of 1917 1
- Código forestal de 1926 1
- Ejidos 1
- Gender 1
- Género 1
- Land ownership 1
- Mexico 1
- Michoacán 1
- Miguel Ángel de Quevedo 1
- Mujeres rurales 1
- Políticas públicas 1
- Programa de Certificación de Derechos Ejidales y Titulación de Solares (México) 1
- Propiedad de la tierra 1
- Protestantism 1
- Public Policies 1
- Rural Women 1
- Tenencia de la tierra 1
- Yucatán (Estado) 1
- Yucatán (México) 1
- anti-clericalism 1
- anticlericalismo 1
- ecology 1
- 显示 1 - 4 个结果,共 4 个
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Reforma agraria: representaciones de género y política de tierras en Colombia
Estudios de Género
2016“...Land Reform: Gender representations and land politics in Colombia....”
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Revolución y paternalismo ecológico: Miguel Ángel de Quevedo y la política forestal en México, 1926-1940
Historia Mexicana
2007“...This paper examines the impact of Miguel Angel de Quevedo's scientific ideas on the forest code, which determined how rural communities could use their forest resources during Cardenas' land reform. An analysis of Quevedo's thought reveals that he was worried that the communities receiving allotments of woodlands would devastate forests. ...”
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Formas cotidianas de participación política rural : el Procede en Yucatán
Estudios Sociológicos
2014“...Finally, my aim is to show that contrary to the expectations of program designers and more broadly of the 1992 Land reform Law promoters, one of the Program unforeseen results has been the emergence, within ejidos, of new types of irregular and illegal practices....”
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Bautistas y presbiterianos en la política religiosa de Francisco J. Múgica y Sidronio Sánchez Pineda, 1920-1924
Historia Mexicana
2018“...Protestant groups assumed a conveniently submissive and flexible attitude towards the authorities, securing the support of Governor Múgica, President Obregón and Interior Secretary Calles, who in turn used the missionaries to secure support for land reform and local anticlerical policies. Governors Mújica and Sánchez Pineda were themselves not interested in strengthening Protestantism at the expense of Catholicism, but nevertheless allowed Protestants to act because their obedience made them into non-hostile elements, as well as a convenient aid in the struggle against Catholicism. ...”