Résultats de la recherche - Institute for Scientific Information
Suggestion de sujets dans votre recherche.
Suggestion de sujets dans votre recherche.
- Mexico 3
- México 3
- 20th Century 2
- América Latina 2
- Latin America 2
- public health 2
- salud pública 2
- siglo XX 2
- Chiapas 1
- Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas 1
- IPCC 1
- Manuel Gamio 1
- México posrevolucionario 1
- National School of Biological Sciences 1
- Oaxaca 1
- abortion 1
- aborto 1
- advocacy 1
- alimentación 1
- capacidades científicas nacionales 1
- censos 1
- censuses 1
- global climate governance 1
- gobernanza climática global 1
- incidencia política 1
- indigenist policy 1
- industria farmacéutica 1
- microdata 1
- microdatos 1
- national scientific capacities 1
- Résultat(s) 1 - 6 résultats de 6
-
-
El auge y declive del Instituto Nacional de Nutriología de México y su proyecto de nutrición social de 1943 a 1956
Historia Mexicana
2019“…The goal of this article is to provide a panoramic view of its creation and offer information that could explain its decline. Under the leadership of Francisco de Paula Miranda, its first director, the inn kept abreast of domestic and international scientific trends. …”
-
La red de innovación de José Erdos Blau en el sector farmacéutico mexicano (1940-1970)
Historia Mexicana
2022“…After World War II, there was a boom in Mexican pharmaceutical research, thanks to the establishment of interested public institutions and private companies. Despite the important accomplishments of domestic and international scientists during the postwar period, the rhythm of Mexican innovations and patents was nevertheless irregular, given the lack of scientific infrastructure in the pharmaceutical sector. …”
-
La integración de los microdatos censales de América Latina: el proyecto IPUMS-América Latina
Estudios Demográficos y Urbanos
2005“…Gustavo Cabrera and other leading demographers, Latin America contains a vast archive of census microdata, the majority of which, however, are inaccessible to researchers.Throughout his academic and scientific career, Professor Cabrera was constantly concerned with information sources. …”