Academic literature on the topic 'Cochabamba (Bolivia)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Cochabamba (Bolivia)"

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Bodansky, Daniel, and Kenneth J. Vandevelde. "Aguas del Tunari, S.A. v. Republic of Bolivia. ICSID Case no. ARB/02/3. Jurisdiction. 20 ICSID." American Journal of International Law 101, no. 1 (January 2007): 179–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000293000002964x.

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Aguas Del Tunari, S.A. v. Republic of Bolivia, ICSID Case No. ARB/02/3. Jurisdiction. 20 ICSID Review: Foreign Investment Law Journal 450 (2005).International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, October 21, 2005.In Aguas del Tunari v. Republic of Bolivia, an International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) tribunal held that it had jurisdiction under the Netherlands-Bolivia bilateral investment treaty (BIT) over a claim against Bolivia brought by a Bolivian company owned primarily by two companies— one American and one Spanish—through Dutch intermediaries. The tribunal found that the Dutch intermediaries “controlled” the Bolivian company and that jurisdiction existed notwithstanding that the dispute related to a concession agreement with a choice-of-forum clause designating Bolivian courts.The origin of the dispute lay in Bolivia's attempt in the late 1990s to privatize the water service in Cochabamba, its third largest city. In September 1999, Bolivia awarded a forty-year concession agreement to a Bolivian company, Aguas del Tunari, S.A. (AdT), for the exclusive provision of water services in the city.
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Godoy, Ricardo, Jonathan Morduch, and David Bravo. "Technological Adoption in Rural Cochabamba, Bolivia." Journal of Anthropological Research 54, no. 3 (October 1998): 351–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/jar.54.3.3630652.

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MACLEOD, ROSS, STEVEN K. EWING, SEBASTIAN K. HERZOG, ROSALIND BRYCE, KARL L. EVANS, and AIDAN MACCORMICK. "First ornithological inventory and conservation assessment for the yungas forests of the Cordilleras Cocapata and Mosetenes, Cochabamba, Bolivia." Bird Conservation International 15, no. 4 (December 2005): 361–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s095927090500064x.

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Bolivia holds one of the world's richest avifaunas, but large areas remain biologically unexplored or unsurveyed. This study carried out the first ornithological inventory of one of the largest of these unexplored areas, the yungas forests of Cordilleras Cocapata and Mosetenes. A total of 339 bird species were recorded including 23 restricted-range, four Near-Threatened, two globally threatened, one new to Bolivia and one that may be new to science. The study extended the known altitudinal ranges of 62 species, 23 by at least 500 m, which represents a substantial increase in our knowledge of species distributions in the yungas, and illustrates how little is known about Bolivia's avifauna. Species characteristic of, or unique to, three Endemic Bird Areas (EBAs) were found. The Cordilleras Cocapata and Mosetenes are a stronghold for yungas endemics and hold large areas of pristine Bolivian and Peruvian Upper and Lower Yungas habitat (EBAs 54 and 55). Human encroachment is starting to threaten the area and priority conservation actions, including designation as a protected area and designation as one of Bolivia's first Important Bird Areas, are recommended.
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Petrov, Alfredo, and Jaroslav Hyrsl. "Mineralogy of Alto Chapare: Cochabamba Department, Bolivia." Rocks & Minerals 83, no. 2 (March 2008): 114–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.3200/rmin.83.2.114-125.

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Paulson, S. "{inverted exclamation}Cochabamba! Water War in Bolivia." Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas 3, no. 4 (December 1, 2006): 101–3. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15476715-2006-026.

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ROIG-ALSINA, A. "A revision of the South American bee genus Leptometriella Roig-Alsina (Hymenoptera, Apidae, Emphorini)." Zootaxa 1688, no. 1 (January 23, 2008): 20. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1688.1.2.

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A revision of the emphorine bee genus Leptometriella Roig-Alsina is presented. These bees occur mostly in xeric areas of South America, from Cochabamba in Bolivia to northern Patagonia in Argentina. Seven species are recognized, four of which are described as new: L. boliviana and L. minima from Bolivia, and L. hirsutula and L. monteana from Argentina. Lectotypes are designated for Teleutemnesta separata Holmberg, 1903, and Ancyloscelis minuta Friese, 1908. Ancyloscelis humilis Vachal, 1904, Ancyloscelis minuta Friese, 1908, and Melitoma specularis Vachal, 1909, are new synonyms of L. separata (Holmberg). A key to the species, descriptions, and illustrations are provided.
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Quinteros-Muñoz, Oliver. "Serpentes, Dipsadidae, Atractus occipitoalbus: second record and distribution extension in Bolivia." Check List 9, no. 1 (February 1, 2013): 76. http://dx.doi.org/10.15560/9.1.76.

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One adult female of Atractus occipitoalbus (Jan, 1862) was collected in a mature secondary forest in Valle de Sacta, Province Chapare, Department of Cochabamba, Bolivia. This new record confirms the presence of the species in Bolivia, and provides a new locality in the country.
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Medrano-Mercado, N., R. Ugarte-Fernandez, V. Butrón, S. Uber-Busek, HL Guerra, Tania C. de Araújo-Jorge, and R. Correa-Oliveira. "Urban transmission of Chagas disease in Cochabamba, Bolivia." Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 103, no. 5 (August 2008): 423–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0074-02762008000500003.

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Edmundo Paz Soldán. "Edmundo Paz Soldán (Cochabamba, Bolivia, 1967)." Nuevo Texto Crítico 21, no. 41-42 (2008): 187–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ntc.0.0069.

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Razavi, Nasya S. "‘Social Control’ and the Politics of Public Participation in Water Remunicipalization, Cochabamba, Bolivia." Water 11, no. 7 (July 14, 2019): 1455. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w11071455.

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During the Water War in 2000, residents of Cochabamba, Bolivia, famously mobilized against water privatization and gained back public control of the city’s water utility. Nearly two decades later, the water movement’s vision of democratic water provision under the participatory management of ‘social control’ remains largely unfulfilled. This paper points to the difficulties in rebuilding a strong public water service in Cochabamba, focusing on the different—and often incompatible—understandings and interpretations of public participation. Addressing the concept’s malleability to a spectrum of ideologies, this paper builds a typology of different kinds of participation according to their intentionality, outcomes, tools, and practices. Applying this framework to the water politics in Bolivia serves to untangle competing perspectives of participation, uncover whose interests are served, and which groups are included or excluded from access to water and decision-making. This analysis reveals how transformative participation has failed to take hold within the municipal service provider in Cochabamba.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Cochabamba (Bolivia)"

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Coen, Stephanie E. "Economic and social dimensions of neighbourhood trade-stores in Cochabamba, Bolivia." Thesis, McGill University, 2006. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=99362.

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Neighbourhood trade-stores, or small scale retail outlets specialising in domestic provisions sold in small quantities, are common features of residential landscapes in developing countries. While these shops are fixtures in the everyday micro-geographies of urban places, little is known as to how they are economically and socially bound up with the neighbourhoods in which they are situated and, in turn, how these linkages influence the day-to-day life circumstances of local people. Through such a local-level investigation utilising multiple qualitative methods, I examine the intra-neighbourhood economic and social roles of small trade-stores in an urban neighbourhood in Cochabamba, Bolivia. My analysis reveals that trade-stores were a key influence on the welfare of neighbourhood residents. Economically, these shops functioned as safeguards for family economies by providing multidimensional material support. Socially, trade-stores acted as mechanisms for informal social control, nodes of local information exchange, and sources of local social opportunities and social support.
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Moreau, Sophie. "The detection and delineation of saline/alkali soils in Cochabamba department Bolivia : a comparison of field survey methods with remote sensing using landsat MSS data." Thesis, McGill University, 1989. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=61929.

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Marston, Andrea Janet. "Post-neoliberal nature? community water governance in peri-urban Cochabamba, Bolivia." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42962.

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Since the turn of the century, Bolivia has been undergoing a leftward political shift that many scholars have described as “post-neoliberal.” This shift is inflected with communitarian and ecological sensibilities, and politicians frequently depict “community” and “nature” as two axes around which a new, post-neoliberal world order can be imagined. The overarching purpose of this thesis is to explore the friction between the country’s putatively post-neoliberal politics and existing community water governance in Cochabamba, Bolivia. This is pursued through two sub-themes: a comparison of the government’s post-neoliberal rhetoric to its resource management policies; and a comparison of celebratory conceptualizations of community governance to the governance strategies of community-run water systems in La Maica, a region of peri-urban Cochabamba. The thesis argues that, while the Morales government rhetorically celebrates “community” and “nature” as essential pillars of post-neoliberal governance paradigm, reality differs from rhetoric in two ways. First, the Bolivian government’s natural resource agenda has involved a shift towards centralized, state-led management, rather than community governance. Second, actually existing examples of community resource governance are intertwined with non-community institutions and multiple scales of governance, implying that communities are contextually embedded and hybridized structures. The progressive (post-neoliberal) potential of community resource governance therefore depends on both its context-specific manifestation and the support that it receives from the state. Primary data for this thesis was gathered during four months of fieldwork in Cochabamba (June to October 2011), and the four methods employed were expert interviews, interviews with community leaders in La Maica, water user surveys in La Maica, and document analysis.
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Wagner, Christopher. "Regression Model to Project and Mitigate Vehicular Emissions in Cochabamba, Bolivia." University of Dayton / OhioLINK, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=dayton1501719312999566.

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Jones, Eric. "In-between Music: The Musical Creation of Cholo Identity in Cochabamba, Bolivia." Thesis, connect to online resource, 2007. http://digital.library.unt.edu/permalink/meta-dc-3957.

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Pierrard, Alexis. "Dialectologie sociale quechua ˸ approche variationnelle du réseau dialectal sud bolivien : focus sur le Valle Alto de Cochabamba." Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018USPCA111/document.

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Cette thèse porte sur le quechua bolivien méridional et ses aspects linguistiques, historiques et sociolinguistiques. Au niveau historique, j’y défends un modèle de diffusion centrifuge hiérarchique urbaine relativement tardive (17ème et 18ème siècles) et d’une hispanisation précoce de cette variété de quechua 2C, avec pour centre principal de diffusion la ville impériale minière de Potosí. L’articulation entre une approche émique (dialectologie perceptive) et étique (sociolinguistique variationniste) m’a par ailleurs mené à proposer une hiérarchisation sociolectale entre deux variétés de quechua bolivien reposant largement sur la perception d’une plus ou moins grande hispanisation. Deux variables linguistiques particulièrement saillantes de cette structuration ont été retenues pour l’étude de la région du Valle Alto de Cochabamba. Les variantes à voyelles basses du morphème du pluriel inclusif Chik, [čeχ], [čaχ], autrefois prestigieuses et en passe de s’imposer sur la variante haute [čis], associée à la ruralité, connaissent aujourd’hui un fort recul suite aux bouleversements socioéconomiques et migratoires des 80 dernières années. Dans le même temps, en production, la distribution des variantes rurales [ʃa] et des variantes urbaines [sqa], [sa] du morphème du progressif Chka, demeure globalement stable. L’interprétation proposée est le manque de saillance de la variable dû à l’absence d’opposition entre sibilantes alvéolaire et post-alvéolaire en quechua 2C et à un phénomène de quasi fusion des allomorphes en perception
This dissertation deals with southern Bolivian Quechua and its linguistic, historical, and sociolinguistic aspects. At a historical level, I advance a model of relatively late (17th and 18th centuries) urban hierarchical centrifugal diffusion and an early Castilianization of the 2C Quechua variety, holding as the main center of diffusion the imperial mining city of Potosí. At the same time, the intersection betwen an emic (perceptive dialectology) and etic (variational sociolinguistic) approach results in the proposal of a sociolectal hierarchy between two varieties of Bolivian Quechua based largely on the perceived strength of Castillianization. As a result, this study of the Cochabamba Valle Alto involves two linguistic variables that are of particular relevance to the proposed structuring. The variants with low vowels from the plural inclusive morpheme Chik, [čeχ], [čaχ], formerly considered prestigious and once on the verge of imposing themselves on the high vowel variant [čis], traditionally linked to rurality, are now experiencing a strong setback as a result of the profound socioeconomic and migratory transformation of the last eighty years. At the same time, in production, the distribution of the rural [ʃa] and urban [sqa], [sa] variants of the morpheme of the progressive Chka remains globally stable. The proposed interpretation is that the lack of prominence of the variable stems from the lack of oposition between the alveolar and post-alveolar sibilants in Quechua 2C, as well as a phenomenon of near merger between the allomorphs in perception
Esta tesis trata del quechua boliviano meridional y de sus aspectos lingüísticos, históricos y sociolingüísticos. A nivel histórico, se defiende un modelo de difusión centrífuga jerárquica urbana relativamente tardía (siglos 17 y 18) y una castellanización temprana de esta variedad de quechua 2C, teniendo como centro principal de difusión la ciudad imperial minera de Potosí. Por otra parte, la articulación entre une acercamiento émico (dialectología perceptiva) y ético (sociolingüística variacionista) me lleva a proponer la existencia de una jerarquización sociolectal entre dos variedades de quechua boliviano, basada ampliamente sobre la percepción de una castellanización más o menos fuerte. Dos variables lingüísticas particularmente relevantes en torno a esta estructuración han sido escogidas para el estudio del Valle Alto de Cochabamba. Las variantes con vocales bajas del morfema del plural inclusivo CHIK, [čeχ], [čaχ], antiguamente prestigiosas y alguna vez a punto de imponerse sobre la variante de vocal alta [čis], vinculada con la ruralidad, conocen hoy en día un fuerte retroceso debido a las profundas transformaciones socioeconómicas y migratorias de los últimos 80 años. Al mismo tiempo, en producción, la distribución de las variantes rurales [ʃa] y de las variantes urbanas [sqa], [sa] del morfema del progresivo CHKA, se mantiene globalmente estable. La interpretación propuesta es la falta de prominencia de la variable debida a la ausencia de oposición entre sibilantes alveolar y post-alveolar en quechua 2C y a un fenómeno de quasi fusión de los alomorfos en percepción
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Garcia, Willy Ivan Anzaldo. "Elaboracion de una mezcla cereal - leguminosa, con similares caracteristicas nutricionales a un producto de consumo local (cerelac) y su respectivo estudio de factibilidad económica /." Cochabamba, Bolivia, 2001. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/cgi-bin/docviewer.exe?CISOROOT=/Benson&CISOPTR=4172.

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Loma, Mercado Karem Khaterine. "Caraterizacion nutricional del algarrobo (Prosopis spp.) en el Departamento de Cochabamba." Cochabamba, Bolivia, 1997. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/Benson/image/24.pdf.

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Mamani-Ortiz, Yercin. "Cardiovascular risk factors in Cochabamba, Bolivia : estimating its distribution and assessing social inequalities." Licentiate thesis, Umeå universitet, Institutionen för epidemiologi och global hälsa, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-164923.

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Background: The increase in the prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs) is considered one of the most important public health problems worldwide and especially in Latin American (LA) countries. Although the systematic surveillance of chronic diseases and their risk factors has been recommended, Bolivia has not yet implemented a national strategy to collect and monitor CVRF information. Evidence from previous studies in Bolivia and other Latin American countries has suggested that CVRFs affect women more than men and mestizos more than indigenous people. However, a more accurate and comprehensive picture of the CVRF situation and how ethnicity and gender intersect to affect CVRFs is dearly needed to support the development of health policies to improve population health and reduce inequalities. Objective: to estimate the distribution of CVRFs and to examine intersectional in equalities in Cochabamba – Bolivia in order to provide useful information for public health practice and decision making. The specific objectives are: i) to estimate the prevalence of preventable risk factors associated with CVDs and ii) to assess and explain obesity inequalities in the intersectional spaces of ethnicity and gender. Methods: The data collection procedure was based on the Pan-American version (V2.0) of the WHO STEPS approach adapted to the Bolivian context. Between 2015 and 2016, 10,754 individuals aged over 18 years old were surveyed. The two first stages of the STEPS approach were conducted: a) Step 1 consisted of the application of a questionnaire to collect demographic and lifestyle data; b) Step 2 involved taking measurements of height, weight, blood pressure, and waist circumference of the participants. To achieve objective 1, the prevalence of relevant behavioural risk factors and anthropometric measures were calculated, and then odds ratios/prevalence ratios were estimated for each CVRF, both with crude and adjusted regression models. Regarding objective 2, an intersectionality approach based on the method suggested by Jackson et al. (67) was used to analyse the ethnic and gender inequalities in obesity. Gender and ethnicity information were combined to form four mutually exclusive intersectional positions: i) the dually disadvantaged group of indigenous women; ii) the dually advantaged group of mestizo men; and the singly disadvantaged groups of iii) indigenous men and iv) mestizo women. Joint and excess intersectional disparities in abdominal obesity were estimated as absolute prevalence differences between binary groups, using binomial regression models. The Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition was applied to estimate the contributions of explanatory factors underlying the observed intersectional disparities. Main findings: Our findings revealed that Cochabamba had a high prevalence of CVRFs, with significant variations among the different socio-demographic groups. Indigenous populations and those living in the Andean region showed, in general, a lower prevalence for most of the risk factors evaluated. The prevalence of behavioural risk factors were: current smoking (11.6%); current alcohol consumption (42.76%); low consumption of fruits and vegetables (76.73%); and low level of physical activity (64.77%). The prevalence of metabolic risk factors evaluated were: being overweight (35.84%); obesity (20.49%); abdominal obesity (54.13%); and raised blood pressure (17.5%). It is important to highlight that 40.7% of participants had four or more CVRFs simultaneously. Dually and singly disadvantaged groups (indigenous women, indigenous men, and mestizo women) were less obese than the dually advantaged group (mestizomen). The joint disparity showed that the obesity prevalence was 7.26 percentage points higher in the doubly advantaged mestizo men (MM) than in the doubly disadvantaged indigenous women (IW). Mestizo men (MM) had an obesity prevalence of 4.30 percentage points higher than mestizo women (MW) and 9.18 percentage points higher than indigenous men (IM). The resulting excess intersectional disparity was 6.22 percentage points, representing -86 percentage points of the joint disparity. The lower prevalence of obesity in the doubly disadvantaged group of indigenous women (7.26 percentage points) was mainly due to ethnic differences alone. However, they had higher obesity than expected when considering both genders alone and ethnicity alone. Health behaviours were important factors in explaining the intersectional inequalities, while differences in socioeconomic and demographic factors played less important roles. Conclusion: The prevalence of all CVRFs in Cochabamba was high, and nearly two-thirds of the population reported two or more risk factors simultaneously. The intersectional disparities illustrate that abdominal obesity is not distributed according to expected patterns of structural disadvantages in the intersectional spaces of ethnicity and gender in Bolivia. A high social advantage was related to higher rates of abdominal obesity, with health behaviours as the most important factors explaining the observed inequalities. The information generated by this study provides evidence for health policymakers at the regional level and a baseline data for department-wide action plans to carry out specific interventionsin the population and on individual levels.
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Myrland, Johanna. "Two-dimensional hydraulic modeling for flood assessment of the Rio Rocha, Cochabamba, Bolivia." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Luft-, vatten och landskapslära, 2014. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-229921.

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Historically humans have settled in river valleys, which has made flooding a natural hazard for human communities. This is also the situation in the valley of Cochabamba, which is frequently affected by floods. Therefore it is of high relevance to assess and manage the flood risk in order to reduce the impact in the affected areas. For this purpose hydraulic simulations were performed with the two-dimensional model Iber. The study area includes 17 kilometers of the main river, Rio Rocha, and its tributaries. The data used in the project was elevation data of high resolution and computed hydrographs. Field work and sensitivity analysis were performed to evaluate the result. The model was used to describe the dynamics of the Rio Rocha and its tributaries during flooding, such as flow path and water levels. The simulations showed that flooding mainly occurs in the tributaries and at eleven other sites without a clear riverbank. Most of the area affected by flooding is agricultural land, but also residential areas and infrastructure were also at risk. The flood duration shown to be longest for agricultural land, which can lead to major crop damage due to anoxic condition. Even though a smaller part of the affected area is residential land, the urbanization in this area is predicted to increase and more land may be settled in the near future.This thesis, along with other studies, highlights the importance of high resolution mesh to perform a hydraulic simulation with a two-dimensional model and the need of data to validate the result.
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Books on the topic "Cochabamba (Bolivia)"

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Ostria, Gustavo Rodríguez. Elites, mercado y cuestión regional en Bolivia: Cochabamba. Quito, Ecuador: Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Sede Ecuador, 1994.

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Asociación de Bancos Privados de Bolivia. Filial Cochabamba. ASOBAN, Filial Cochabamba, Cuarenta años 1970-2010. Cochabamba, Bolivia: Asociación de Bancos Privados de Bolivia, ASOBAN Filial Cochabamba, 2010.

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Central Obrera Departamental (Cochabamba, Bolivia). Estatutos de la C.O.D. Cochabamba. Cochabamba, Bolivia: Central Obrera Departamental, 1993.

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Ridher, Sánchez Andrade, ed. Mujeres en el municipio: Participación política de concejalas de Cochabamba. La Paz, Bolivia: Fundación PIEB, 2007.

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Colonialism and agrarian transformation in Bolivia: Cochabamba, 1550-1900. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press, 1988.

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Brooke, Larson, ed. Cochabamba, 1550-1900: Colonialism and agrarian transformation in Bolivia. Durham: Duke University Press, 1998.

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Gallego, Saturnino. La Salle en Bolivia: Bodas de diamante, 1919-1994. La Paz: Editorial Bruño, 1994.

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Regional markets and agrarian transformation in Bolivia: Cochabamba, 1539-1960. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1994.

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Gyarmati, János. The chacaras of war: An Inka state estate in the Cochabamba Valley, Bolivia. Budapest: Museum of Ethnography, 1999.

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Saucedo, Carlos Hugo Molina. Evaluación de los Consejos Departamentales y Provinciales: Estudios de caso. La Paz, Bolivia: Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, ILDIS, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Cochabamba (Bolivia)"

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Snelling, Scott, Preston Vineyard, and Tom Cooper. "Chari Chari Bridge, Omereque, Cochabamba, Bolivia." In Engineering for Sustainable Communities, 393–99. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784414811.ch28.

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Schiffler, Manuel. "Bolivia: The Cochabamba Water War and Its Aftermath." In Water, Politics and Money, 17–26. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-16691-9_2.

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Bastia, Tanja, Claudia Calsina Valenzuela, and María Esther Pozo. "Entrepreneurial Grannies: Migration and ‘Older Left-Behind’ in Cochabamba, Bolivia." In Life Course Research and Social Policies, 29–43. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-71442-0_3.

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Helgegren, Ida, Helena Siltberg, Sebastien Rauch, Mikael Mangold, Graciela Landaeta, and Carmen Ledo. "Contextualizing Sustainable Development for Small Scale Water and Sanitation Systems in Cochabamba, Bolivia." In Urban Environment, 217–25. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7756-9_18.

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da Silva-Ovando, Agatha Clarice, and Carla Andrea Ocampo-Terceros. "Understanding the Behavior of the Low-Income Population When Purchasing Fruits and Vegetables. Case Study of Cochabamba (Cercado) - Bolivia." In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Water Energy Food and Sustainability (ICoWEFS 2021), 12–19. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-75315-3_2.

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Metternicht, G., and J. A. Zinck. "Geomorphic Landscape Approach to Mapping Soil Degradation and Hazard Prediction in Semi-arid Environments: Salinization in the Cochabamba Valleys, Bolivia." In Geopedology, 425–39. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-19159-1_26.

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"Contacto y cambio lingüístico en Cochabamba (Bolivia)." In La Romania americana. Procesos lingüísticos en situaciones de contacto., 219–54. Vervuert Verlagsgesellschaft, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.31819/9783865278913-009.

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Bresnihan, Patrick. "Infrastructural care and water politics in Cochabamba, Bolivia." In Split Waters, 194–215. Routledge India, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003030171-13.

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9

Anderson, Karen. "Tiwanaku Influence on Local Drinking Patterns in Cochabamba, Bolivia." In Drink, Power, and Society in the Andes, 167–99. University Press of Florida, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813033068.003.0007.

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Gotkowitz, Laura. "“¡No hay hombres!”: Género, nación y las Heroínas de la Coronilla de Cochabamba(1885 - 1926)." In El siglo XIX: Bolivia y América latina, 701–16. Institut français d’études andines, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.ifea.7467.

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Reports on the topic "Cochabamba (Bolivia)"

1

Sanchez, Ronald, and Michael G. Donovan, eds. Proyecto de Plan Urbano Maestro en Sacaba, Cochabamba, Bolivia. Inter-American Development Bank, October 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0001314.

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Scholl, Lynn, Mohamed Elagaty, Bismarck Ledezma-Navarro, Edgar Zamora, and Luis Miranda-Moreno. A Surrogate Video-Based Safety Methodology for Diagnosis and Evaluation of Low-Cost Pedestrian-Safety Countermeasures: The Case of Cochabamba, Bolivia. Inter-American Development Bank, October 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0001942.

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