Latin American Culinary Capitals: MEXICO CITYKaren Hursh Graber
LATIN AMERICAN CULINARY CAPITALS:LimaKaren Hursh Graber
Embarking on a journey through Spanish-speaking countries, a Shenzhen girl explores the beauty of nature and discovers the radiant spirit of humanity during an adventurous and somewhat anxious solo trip through two South American...
Many countries are integrating green–blue spaces within their local plans to ensure holistic and sustainable urban development (Bel Fekih Boussema et al. 2022; Pauleit et al. 2017). In the Global South, this process occurs amidst significant socio-ecological complexities. Despite GBI's recognized...
Control and penetration mechanisms in nearly all Latin American countries are manifold, if not at the national, then surely at the municipal levels, also in the megacities of Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Mexico City and Caracas (Kruijt & Koonings, 2015): direct infiltration in...
The culture in Buenos Aires is inward-looking, divorce charges are high and foreigners aren’t made to feel as welcome as in other Latin American capitals. But, when you venture outdoors the metropolis, you’ll find a a lot hotter culture together with a much less indifferent feminine ...
In this paper, we use tax and household survey data to assess the history of income distribution in Argentina since the beginning of the 20th century. Until the 1970s, the country experienced a fall in inequality in spite of lower income growth. Since th
December 2024popular3,288 tours January 20253,024 tours February 20252,924 tours Spring 2025 Spring brings superb wildlife viewing opportunities in the Galápagos Islands desert blooms across Chile. The weather is ideal for hiking to Machu Picchu and exploring ancient cities. ...
Shows that measures and actions taken by the states have been unable to halt centralism in their capitals or to put life into regional economies. In both cases power groups identified with economic interests in the capital effectively resist any attempts to undermine their monopoly of the countries...
In no case did the 1914–18 war appear as a significant rupture in the long course of a Latin American century routinely seen through the prism of two great turning points: the economic crisis of 1919 and the Cuban Revolution of 1959. On the basis of a view of the Great War which ...