Academic literature on the topic 'Venezuelans in Panama'

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Journal articles on the topic "Venezuelans in Panama"

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DA SILVA, ESTEVAM L. CRUZ, and ARNO A. LISE. "Seven new species of Enna (Araneae: Trechaleidae) from Central and South America." Zootaxa 2919, no. 1 (June 15, 2011): 60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2919.1.4.

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Seven new species of the spider genus Enna O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1897 from Central and South America are described and illustrated for the first time: Enna carinata sp. nov. (male, Panama), E. triste sp. nov. (male, Venezuela), E. caricoi sp. nov. (male, Colombia), E. venezuelana sp. nov. (female, Venezuela), E. silvae sp. nov. (female, Peru), E. frijoles sp. nov. (female, Panama) and E. zurqui sp. nov. (female, Costa Rica). A new record of Enna estebanensis (Simon, 1898) is reported from Ecuador.
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CUEZZO, CAROLINA, and ELIANA M. CANCELLO. "A new species of Obtusitermes (Isoptera, Termitidae, Nasutitermitinae) from South America." Zootaxa 1993, no. 1 (February 2, 2009): 61–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1993.1.6.

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Obtusitermes Snyder is a genus endemic to the Neotropics, restricted to northern South America and southern Central America. Obtusitermes panamae Snyder was described from Quipo, Panama. Herein, we describe Obtusitermes formosulus, n. sp., from Venezuela and Trinidad and Tobago, based on the dimorphic soldier and polymorphic worker. These descriptions provide strong evidence that Parvitermes bacchanalis Mathews should not be included in Obtusitermes.
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González, Guillermo, and Jaroslav Větrovec. "New species and records of Neotropical ladybirds (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae)." REVISTA CHILENA DE ENTOMOLOGÍA 47, no. 2 (May 31, 2021): 331–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.35249/rche.47.2.21.19.

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A review of the Neotropical Coccinellidae in the Prague Museum, also including to a lesser extent material from other collections, has led to the description of 14 new species from Brazil, Ecuador, Panama, Peru, and Venezuela, two new combinations and 16 first records for countries. The new species described are Cyrea napoensis, Dilatitibialis manaus (Brachiacanthini), Neaporia chucanti, Prodilis saopaulo, P. pastaza and P. qedi (Cephaloscymnini), Siola karpish (Chnoodini), Calloeneis veraguas (Cryptognathini), Diomus chiriqui, D. panamensis and D. sekerkai (Diomini), Toxotoma venezuelae and T. aguascalientes (Epilachnini) and Nexophallobase panamensis (Stilochotidini) nov. spp. The new combinations are Sidonis vianai (for Neorhizobius vianai González, 2013) and Neda areolata (for Neocalvia areolata Gorham, 1982) comb. nov. First country records are Azya exuta Gordon for Ecuador, Chilocorus nigrita (Fabricius) for French Guiana, Harpasus zonatus (Mulsant) for Paraguay, Chnoodes separata Mader for Paraguay, Coelaria erythrogaster Mulsant for Surinam, Sidonis vianai (González) for Brazil, Coleomegilla occulta González for Bolivia, Neda callispilota (Guerín-Méneville) for Uruguay, Epilachna bistrisignata (Mader) for Peru, Epilachna dives Erichson for Bolivia, Hyperaspis pseudodonzeli Gordon & Canepari for Ecuador and French Guiana, Menoscelis saginata Mulsant for Bolivia, Zagloba beaumonti Casey for Bolivia and Venezuela and Scymnus hamatus Gordon for Panama.
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González-Vera, A. D., J. Bernardes-de-Assis, M. Zala, B. A. McDonald, F. Correa-Victoria, E. J. Graterol-Matute, and P. C. Ceresini. "Divergence Between Sympatric Rice- and Maize-Infecting Populations of Rhizoctonia solani AG-1 IA from Latin America." Phytopathology® 100, no. 2 (February 2010): 172–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/phyto-100-2-0172.

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The basidiomycetous fungus Rhizoctonia solani anastomosis group (AG)-1 IA is a major pathogen in Latin America causing sheath blight (SB) of rice. Particularly in Venezuela, the fungus also causes banded leaf and sheath blight (BLSB) on maize, which is considered an emerging disease problem where maize replaced traditional rice-cropping areas or is now planted in adjacent fields. Our goals in this study were to elucidate (i) the effects of host specialization on gene flow between sympatric and allopatric rice and maize-infecting fungal populations and (ii) the reproductive mode of the fungus, looking for evidence of recombination. In total, 375 isolates of R. solani AG1 IA sampled from three sympatric rice and maize fields in Venezuela (Portuguesa State) and two allopatric rice fields from Colombia (Meta State) and Panama (Chiriquí State) were genotyped using 10 microsatellite loci. Allopatric populations from Venezuela, Colombia, and Panama were significantly differentiated (ΦST of 0.16 to 0.34). Partitioning of the genetic diversity indicated differentiation between sympatric populations from different host species, with 17% of the total genetic variation distributed between hosts while only 3 to 6% was distributed geographically among the sympatric Venezuelan fields. We detected symmetrical historical migration between the rice- and the maize-infecting populations from Venezuela. Rice- and maize-derived isolates were able to infect both rice and maize but were more aggressive on their original hosts, consistent with host specialization. Because the maize- and rice-infecting populations are still cross-pathogenic, we postulate that the genetic differentiation was relatively recent and mediated via a host shift. An isolation with migration analysis indicated that the maize-infecting population diverged from the rice-infecting population between 40 and 240 years ago. Our findings also suggest that maize-infecting populations have a mainly recombining reproductive system whereas the rice-infecting populations have a mixed reproductive system in Latin America.
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RUTA, RAFAŁ. "Calvariopsis gen. nov., a new genus of Neotropical Scirtidae (Coleoptera: Scirtoidea)." Zootaxa 4604, no. 1 (May 13, 2019): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4604.1.1.

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A new genus of Scirtidae, Calvariopsis gen. nov., is described to accommodate two species described by Maurice Pic (Prionocyphon brasiliensis Pic, 1916 and Cyphon sculptipenne Pic, 1931) and 14 newly described species: Calvariopsis bituberculata sp. nov. (French Guiana), C. borowieci sp. nov. (Ecuador), C. fourgassiense sp. nov. (French Guiana), C. guyanense sp. nov. (Guyana), C. kawense sp. nov. (French Guiana), C. nana sp. nov. (Brazil), C. panamense sp. nov. (Panama), C. peruviana sp. nov. (Peru), C. picta sp. nov. (Bolivia), C. pittieri sp. nov. (Venezuela), C. saopaulense sp. nov. (Brazil), C. venezuelense sp. nov. (Venezuela), C. wittmeri sp. nov. (Brazil), and C. yanayacuense sp. nov. (Ecuador) [type species of Calvariopsis]. The new genus can be distinguished from other Neotropical Scirtidae on the basis of the following characters: antennae filiform, subgenal ridge without buttonhole configuration, head with deep subantennal grooves, mesoventral process short, as long as wide or shorter, hind legs not saltatorial.
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PERKINS, PHILIP D. "A revision of Epimetopus Lacordaire, the New World hooded shore beetles (Coleoptera: Epimetopidae)." Zootaxa 3531, no. 1 (October 30, 2012): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3531.1.1.

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The New World genus Epimetopus Lacordaire, 1854, is revised, based on the examination and databasing of 2,470specimens. New collection records are provided for 15 previously described species, and 36 new species aredescribed. The Epimetopus fauna now comprises 56 species, of which 37 are restricted to South America, 17 are onlyfound north of South America, and only two species are known from both areas. Epimetopus ranges from Argentinato Arizona and Arkansas, but there are no records from the Amazon basin. The genus is divided into seven speciesgroups, five of which are newly delineated. High resolution digital images of all primary types are presented (onlineversions in color), geographic distributions of all species are mapped, and male genitalia of primary types areillustrated. The morphology of the underside of the pronotal hood is described and illustrated for the first time. Onenew synonomy is proposed, placing E. leechi Rocha as a junior synonym of E. balfourbrownei Rocha. New speciesof Epimetopus are: E. acuminatus (Guatemala: El Progresso, km. 69 on C. A. 9); E. angustus (Ecuador: Napo, Tena);E. arcuatus (Paraguay: Dep. Concepcion, Arroyo Toro Paso, Unterlauf ); E. arizonicus (USA: Arizona, Pajarito Mts.,Sycamore Canyon); E. ballatoris (Venezuela: Tachira State, El Tama National Park); E. bifidus (Mexico: Oaxaca,Tapanatepec, 8 mi. W Oaxaca); E. clandestinus (Brazil: Mato Grosso, Caceres); E. clypeatus (Guyana: Region 8,Iwokrama Forest, 1 km W Kurupukan); E. coleuncus (Argentina: Tucuman, Departamento de Burruyacu, Rio Salas);E. deceptus (Brazil: Mato Grosso, Caceres); E. ecuadorensis (Ecuador: Napo, 17 km SW Tena); E. fimbriatus (Brazil:Mato Grosso, São Felix); E. inaequalis (Ecuador: Napo, Tena); E. lanceolatulus (Brazil: Mato Grosso, Caceres); E.lanceolatus (Brazil: Mato Grosso, Caceres); E. latilobus (Costa Rica: Puntarenas, Monteverde area); E. latisoides(Panama: Canal Zone, 12.0 mi NW Gamboa); E. latus (Colombia: Cesar, Pueblo Bello, Sierra de Santa Marta); E.lobilatus (Costa Rica: Limon, Reventazon, Hamburg Farm); E. microporus (Panama: Panama Province, Rio Mamoniat PanAm Hwy); E. mucronatus (Honduras: Rio Humuya NW Comayagua); E. multiportus (Uruguay: 90 km SWArtigas); E. oaxacus (Mexico: Oaxaca, Tapanatepec, 8 mi. W Oaxaca); E. peruvianus (Peru: Ayacucho, La Mar, SantaRosa); E. plicatus (Venezuela: Tachira State, El Tama National Park); E. rectus (Costa Rica: Heredia, OTS La SelvaField Sta., Puerto Viejo de Sarapique, Rio Puerto Viejo); E. robustus (Panama: Canal Zone, 4.1 mi NW Gamboa, RioFrijoles); E. spatulus (Peru: Madre de Dios, Pantiacolla Lodge, Monk Saki Trail, Alto Madre de Dios River); E.steineri (Ecuador: Napo, Tena); surinamensis (Suriname: Sipaliwini District, Camp 3, Wehepai); E. transversoides(Peru: Madre de Dios, Pantiacolla Lodge, Monk Saki Trail, Alto Madre de Dios River); E. transversus (Bolivia: LaPaz, Alcoche); E. tridens (Brazil: Sao Paulo, Campos do Jordão, Parque do Estado Rio Galharada); E. trilobus(Venezuela: Bolivar, Los Pijiguaos); E. venezuelensis (Venezuela: Apure State, ca. 1 km N. Rio Claro); E. vulpinus (Brazil: Rio Grande do Sul, Pelotas).
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Alvarado, Mabel, and Luis Figueroa. "New country records of the Metopiinae (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) in the Neotropical region." Entomological Communications 1 (December 11, 2019): ec01010. http://dx.doi.org/10.37486/2675-1305.ec01010.

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The range distribution is expanded for 26 Metopiinae species: Colpotrochia beluga Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Panama); C. diabella Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Venezuela); C. feroza Gauld & Sithole, 2002 and C. texana (Cresson, 1872) (Ecuador); C. watanka Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Ecuador, French Guiana); Cubus validus (Cresson, 1865) (Peru); Exochus ozanus Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Argentina); E. spinalis Townes & Townes, 1959 (Ecuador); E. pubitus Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Guatemala); E. krellus Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Mexico); E. pedanticus Gauld & Sithole, 2002, E. xetus Gauld & Sithole, 2002 and E. yorizus Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Panama); E. obezus Gauld & Sithole, 2002 and E. ravetus Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Peru); E. vanitus Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Guatemala, Nicaragua, Panama); E. voxanus Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Guatemala, Mexico, Panama); E. navitus Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Ecuador, Honduras, Venezuela); Trieces platysoma Townes, 1946 (Suriname); T. tyloidalis Mazón & Bordera, 2016 (Bolivia); T. wardae Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Ecuador); T. zwizarmae Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Peru); T. horisme Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Argentina, Belize, Mexico, Panama); T. riodinis Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Curaçao, Ecuador, Mexico, Panama, Saint Vincent and The Grenadines); T. tuvule Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Belize, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico); and T. wasnia Gauld & Sithole, 2002 (Panama, Peru).
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Monteza-Moreno, Claudio Manuel, Carlos Ramos, Victor Martínez, and Mahmood Sasa. "ON THE IDENTITY OF HOG-NOSED PIT-VIPERS FROM WESTERN PANAMA: A REVIEW OF SPECIMENS OF PORTHIDIUM LANSBERGII (SCHLEGEL, 1841) IN LOWER CENTRAL AMERICA." Tecnociencia 22, no. 2 (July 2, 2020): 27–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.48204/j.tecno.v22n2a2.

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Porthidium lansbergii is a relatively abundant pit viper in semiarid environments from eastern Panama, through the Caribbean plains and Magdalena Valley in Colombia to northeastern Venezuela. Like other members of this genus, P. lansbergii exhibits great variation in scutellation and other morphological characters, a situation that has complicated the taxonomy and identification of populations assigned to the species. In Lower Central America, P. lansbergii is known to inhabit seasonally-dry environments of the Pacific slopes of western Panama. Here, we aimed to clarify the taxonomic status of some enigmatic specimens collected in western Panama, with morphological ambiguity, resembling P. lansbergii. We used the mitochondrial marker cytochrome oxidase b to perform a Bayesian phylogenetic analysis, to evaluate the affinities ofthese specimens with P. lansbergii individuals from central and eastern Panama, and Venezuela. We also analyzed meristic morphological characters to discriminate among populations of P. lansbergii in Panama, including other species of the Porthidium genus. Our analyses indicate that the enigmatic individuals do not differ from others individuals identified as P. lansbergii, thus forming a monophyletic group. We conclude that P. lansbergii has a more extended range than currently recognized including the western Pacific in Panama.
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Hastings, Alexander K., Moritz Reisser, and Torsten M. Scheyer. "Character evolution and the origin of Caimaninae (Crocodylia) in the New World Tropics: new evidence from the Miocene of Panama and Venezuela." Journal of Paleontology 90, no. 2 (March 2016): 317–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jpa.2016.37.

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AbstractAlligators and caimans share a close relationship, supported by both molecular and morphological characters. The divergence between alligators and caimans has been difficult to discern in the fossil record. Two basal taxa have recently been described from the Miocene of Panama and Venezuela but have not yet been presented in a joint phylogeny. Continued preparation of the type material of the Venezuelan Globidentosuchus brachyrostris Scheyer et al., 2013 has revealed new characters for scoring in a cladistic framework. In addition, the first lower jaw of the Panamanian Centenariosuchus gilmorei Hastings et al., 2013 is described herein, and additional characters were scored. In total, we conducted five cladistic analyses to better understand the character evolution involved in the establishment of Caimaninae. In each case, Globidentosuchus appears as the basal-most of the caimanine lineage, followed by Culebrasuchus mesoamericanus Hastings et al., 2013 from Panama. Stepwise character additions of synapomorphies define progressively more derived caimanines, but stratigraphic context creates ghost lineages extending from the Miocene to Paleocene. The persistence of two basal taxa into the Miocene of northern South America and Central America supports the concept of a relict basal population in this region. This further supports biogeographic hypotheses of dispersals in both directions between North and South America prior to full land connection.
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NORRBOM, ALLEN L., and CHESLAVO A. KORYTKOWSKI. "A revision of the Anastrepha robusta species group (Diptera: Tephritidae)." Zootaxa 2182, no. 1 (August 6, 2009): 1–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2182.1.1.

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The Anastrepha robusta species group is revised to include the following 29 species: A. amaryllis Tigrero (Ecuador), A. amazonensis, n. sp. (Brazil: Amazonas), A. bella, n. sp. (Panamá), A. binodosa Stone (Brazil: Amazonas, Pará), A. concava Greene (Costa Rica to Ecuador and Brazil: Amazonia), A. cordata Aldrich (México to Venezuela), A. cryptostrepha Hendel (Peru, Surinam), A. cryptostrephoides, n. sp. (Perú), A. disticrux, n. sp. (Jamaica), A. fenestrata Lutz & Lima (Brazil: Amazonas, Pará), A. fenestrella, n. sp. (Costa Rica, Panamá), A. furcata Lima (Panamá, French Guiana, Brazil: Amazonas, Pará, Bahia, Espírito Santo), A. fuscata, n. sp. (Perú), A. isolata, n. sp. (Ecuador, Brazil: Amazonas), A. jamaicensis, n. sp. (Jamaica), A. lambda Hendel (Perú), A. miza, n. sp. (Venezuela), A. nigra, n. sp. (Panamá), A. nigrifascia Stone (Bahamas, USA: Florida), A. nigrivittata, n. sp. (Guyana), A. partita, n. sp. (“Amazon”), A. phaeoptera Lima (Brazil: Bahia, Rio Grande do Sul), A. pittieri Caraballo (Panamá, Venezuela), A. pseudorobusta, n. sp. (Perú, Trinidad, Venezuela), A. rafaeli, n. sp. (Brazil: Roraima, Venezuela), A. robusta Greene (México to Panamá), A. rojasi, n. sp. (Costa Rica, Panamá), A. simulans Zucchi (Brazil: Paraná, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro), and A. speciosa Stone (Panamá). Moutabea longifolia is recorded as a host plant of A. rojasi, the first host record for Anastrepha species from the plant family Polygalaceae. The larvae feed on the seeds within the fruit. A key to the species and descriptions and illustrations for each species are provided, and their possible relationships are discussed.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Venezuelans in Panama"

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Kaiser, Daniel R. "The regional response to the crisis in Colombia." Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 2003. http://library.nps.navy.mil/uhtbin/hyperion-image/03Jun%5FKaiser.pdf.

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Thesis (M.A. in National Security Affairs)--Naval Postgraduate School, June 2003.
Thesis advisor(s): Jeanne Giraldo, Harold Trinkunas. Includes bibliographical references (p. 77-83). Also available online.
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Matsunaga, Fernando [UNESP]. "A UNESCO e a governança ambiental na bacia amazônica." Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/11449/93730.

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Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:26:45Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2011-06-06Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T18:30:30Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 matsunaga_f_me_mar.pdf: 578631 bytes, checksum: 4f9ea920c19f05a53f249fdb3e1b0a5d (MD5)
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
A Organização das Nações Unidas para a Educação, Ciência e Cultura (UNESCO) é estruturada de forma multidisciplinar atuando nas diversas áreas do saber e conhecimento. Uma delas é a questão ambiental, que ganha cada vez mais destaque no cenário internacional. Atualmente está em desenvolvimento e execução a Década da Educação para o Desenvolvimento Sustentável, que vai de 2005-2014 (DEDS) e conta com diversas parcerias e busca ampliar ações em prol da Sustentabilidade Ambiental. Este projeto é estruturado de forma a pensar e discutir a Governança Global Ambiental (GGA) – sua origem, processos e problemas (conceituais e práticos) - e entender como a UNESCO contribui para a GGA através da Educação para o Desenvolvimento Sustentável (EDS). Embora a UNESCO seja uma Instituição de atuação global, enfocaremos as ações e debates desenvolvidos na Bacia Amazônica relacionados principalmente com o Programa Latino-Americano e Caribenho de Educação Ambiental (PLACEA), no âmbito da Iniciativa Latino Americana e Caribenha de Desenvolvimento Sustentável (ILAC), proposta pela Venezuela em 2003 e o Plano Andino-amazônico de Comunicação e Educação Ambiental (PANACEA), proposto pelo Peru em 2005
The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) is structured in a multidisciplinary way acting on several areas of knowledge. One of that is the environmental that gain more space in the international scene. The United Nations Decade of the Education for the Sustainable Development from 2005 to 2014 is an initiative in progress that has many partnerships and seeks to expand actions toward Environmental Sustainability. This project is structured in a way that allow us to think and discuss the Environmental Global Governance (EGG) – its origins, process and problems (conceptual and practical) and understand how the UNESCO contribute to the EGG throughout the Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). Although it is an Institution of global scale, our focus will be in the actions and debates on the Amazon Region specially those that are related with the Latin American and Caribbean Program of Environmental Education (PLACEA), part of the of the Latin American and Caribbean Initiative for Sustainable Development (ILAC), proposed by Venezuela in 2003 and the Andean-amazonic Plan of Environmental Communication and Education (PANACEA), proposed by Peru in 2005
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Afanador, Maria Jose. "The unmaking of empire : nature and politics in the early Colombian imagination, 1808-1821." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-2745.

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In this report I argue that during the independence wars from Spain and the first decade of republican rule, the learned elite of the viceroyalty of New Granada—present day Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Panama—articulated narratives of nature and science to debates over provincial hierarchies, to justify provincial unity, foreign commercial integration, and the creation of political symbols for the new polity. In the process of undoing the Spanish empire, the lettered elite conceived of their homeland’s natural bounties as key cultural capital, and as the language with which to frame their aspirations as political community, as part of a national polity or of regional patrias. By using newspapers, constitutional debates, scientific writings, and visual evidence, I place the elite’s sensibilities and concerns about their fatherland’s nature in the wider context of political transformations that took place from 1808 and on. In the first section, I explore eighteenth-century assessments of New Granada’s nature, offering an overview of key conceptions of New Granada’s geopolitical situation and nature that shaped the Creole imagination. In the second section, I characterize the reforms brought about by the Bourbon monarchy in New Granada, giving weight to the socialization of practices of the utility of science among the learned elite. The third section illustrates how Neogranadians deployed nature in assessing provincial fragmentation, and in the debate over the preeminence of Santafé as capital when the monarchic crisis exploded. The fourth section explores how nature was employed as an argument in debates over the integration of present-day Colombia, Venezuela, and Ecuador into a single republic, and the adoption of a federal or a central state. Finally, section five discusses the role of New Granada’s natural landmarks in discourses of provincial and foreign commercial integration, along with a reflection on the use of nature as political symbol for the new republic. My aim is to explore the ways that the lettered elite incorporated nature into geopolitical discourses of a polity separate from Spain, and to uncover the tensions embedded in the ways they imagined their desired nation.
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Books on the topic "Venezuelans in Panama"

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Venezuela, Panamá: Relaciones diplomáticas, 1903-2000. Caracas: [s.n.], 2003.

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Becerra, Augusto Hernández. Legislación electoral comparade: Colombia, México, Panamá, Venezuela y Centroamérica. San José, Costa Rica: CAPEL, 1986.

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Crespo, Xurxo Martínez. Galiza en Dominicana, Nicaragua, Panamá e Venezuela: Unha ollada fotográfica. [Vigo, Spain]: Fundación para o Estudo e a Divulgación da Cuestion Social e Sindical en Galiza (FESGA), 2007.

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Crespo, Xurxo Martínez. Galiza en Dominicana, Nicaragua, Panamá e Venezuela: Unha ollada fotográfica. [Vigo, Spain]: Fundación para o Estudo e a Divulgación da Cuestion Social e Sindical en Galiza (FESGA), 2007.

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Crespo, Xurxo Martínez. Galiza en Dominicana, Nicaragua, Panamá e Venezuela: Unha ollada fotográfica. [Vigo, Spain]: Fundación para o Estudo e a Divulgación da Cuestion Social e Sindical en Galiza (FESGA), 2007.

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The rise of the Latin American baseball leagues, 1947-1961: Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Puerto Rico, and Venezuela. Jefferson, N.C: McFarland & Co., 2011.

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(Organization), Convenio Andrés Bello. Pensamiento pedagógico de los grandes educadores de los países del Convenio Andrés Bello: Antología, Bolivia, Colombia, Chile, Ecuador, España, Panamá, Perú, Venezuela. Santafé de Bogotá, Colombia: Convenio Andrés Bello, Secretaría Ejecutiva, 1995.

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Morcillo, Pedro Pablo. Legislación y aspectos institucionales ambientales en algunos paises miembros prestatarios del BID: México, Costa Rica, Panamá, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Perú, Bolivia, Chile, Argentina, Brasil, Jamaica. Washington, D.C: Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo, Comité del Medio Ambiente, 1989.

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Víquez, Roxana M. Dimensión y problemática que afecta a los desplazados hacia Ecuador, Venezuela y Panamá, por el conflicto bélico en Colombia: [el rostro ignorado de los desplazados colombianos más allá de las fronteras : diagnostico]. San José, C.R: FUNPADEM, 2004.

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Asociativismo municipal en América Latina: Gobiernos locales y sociedad civil : asociaciones de gobiernos locales de Argentina, Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, México, Nicaragua, Panamá, Paraguay, Perú, República Dominicana, Uruguay y Venezuela. Quito, Ecuador: ABYA YALA, 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "Venezuelans in Panama"

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Solano, Carlos Barba, and Enrique Valencia Lomelí. "Actors and Social Reforms in Five Dual Welfare Regimes in Latin America: Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, Panama and Venezuela." In Latin American Social Policy Developments in the Twenty-First Century, 61–100. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-61270-2_3.

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Gaztambide, María C. "The Fluidity of Venezuelan Informalism." In El Techo de la Ballena, 53–76. University Press of Florida, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9781683400707.003.0003.

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Chapter 2 examines how, in the context of this imperfect panorama, Informalism represented the visual manifestation of a growing discontent with the economic conditions that spurned the “make-believe” at the core of the diatribes of the Venezuelan anthropologist Fernando Coronil and the telenovela pioneer turned political commentator José Ignacio Cabrujas. In the late eighties, they had observed that with the professionalization of the oil industry in earlier decades the wealth that it generated attained chimerical qualities in Venezuela. Such rapid development that obscured the realities of a largely agrarian nation whose modernization was artificially fed by petrodollars. Here, I borrow from GeorgesBataille’s treatises on ritualistic expenditure and his argument that economic wealth and growth governed the physical force field of all organic phenomena. I propose that by the early sixties Venezuela’s unspent energetic surplus had begun to unleash a destructive process from popular segments of the population that, it may be argued, is climaxing in present-day Chavismo. Bataille’s thinking revealed the paradox of utility, or life “beyond [the realm] of utility” as he described it: its ultimate end could only be uselessness as sovereignty was achieved only by those who consumed but did not labor.
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Pastrana, Tania, Denisse Ruth Parra Giordano, Miguel Antonio Sánchez Cárdenas, Xiomara Carmona Montoya, and Beatriz Montes de Oca. "Palliative care in Latin America." In Oxford Textbook of Palliative Nursing, 1111–17. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199332342.003.0076.

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This chapter focuses on palliative care in one Portuguese-speaking country (Brazil) and eighteen Spanish-speaking countries (Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela). The challenge for palliative care in Latin America is to develop a model of care appropriate to the sociocultural context and integrated to public health, including suitable policies, education, and implementation of palliative care programs to all levels of society.
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Sobrado, Miguel. "The OW in Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador and Peru." In A Future for the Excluded. Zed Books, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350218000.ch-008.

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Edelstein, David M. "The Rise of the United States." In Over the Horizon. Cornell University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501707568.003.0004.

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By the beginning of the twentieth century, the United States had emerged as a substantial great power. Despite a century of animosity, the United States and Great Britain were able to reconcile at this time. This chapter reviews the process by which this reconciliation took place, including through three crises that defined the terms of their relationship in the western hemisphere—the Venezuela boundary crisis, the Panama Canal crisis, and the Canadian border crisis. In addition, by accepting a U.S. presence in East Asia, Britain signalled its comfort with the arrival of the U.S. as a great power. British confidence in U.S. long-term intentions, not any judgment about U.S. capabilities, were key to Anglo-American friendship.
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"Chapter V. Germany, Venezuela, and the Panama Canal: The Elusive Quest for Agerman Naval Base in South America." In Germany's Vision of Empire in Venezuela, 1871-1914, 141–74. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781400858279.141.

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Reinisch, August. "Introductory Note." In The Global Community Yearbook of International Law and Jurisprudence 2018, 793–808. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190072506.003.0035.

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In 2017, the jurisprudence of ICSID tribunals and ad hoc committees largely followed established lines. The jurisdictional decisions in Koch v. Venezuela and Bridgestone v. Panama evidenced that in spite of the lowered standards under the Salini-light test investment tribunals are still concerned about including normal sales transactions under the scope of investment agreements. They have similarly grappled with avoiding to fully open up their ratione personae jurisdiction to state-owned companies. On substantive issues, the tribunal in Bear Creek Mining v. Peru found an indirect (and unlawful) expropriation, whereas the tribunal in Eiser v. Spain held that the fundamental change of the regulatory regime in renewable energy violated the host state’s obligations under the Energy Charter Treaty’s fair and equitable treatment obligation. Various ICSID tribunals in the renewable energy cases against the Czech Republic, Italy and Spain, dealt with the stability and predictability obligations of host states under the FET standard in light of regulatory changes. The annulment committee in Suez v. Argentina (II) confirmed its limited power of reviewing ICSID awards.
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AIRES, D. C. "EDUCAÇÃO SEXUAL E DIREITOS HUMANOS: LEIS NA BOLÍVIA, NICARÁGUA, PANAMÁ, PERU E VENEZUELA." In Gênero e diversidade na educação, 244–60. Arco Editores, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.48209/978-18-genero-3-3.

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Brewer-Carias, Allan. "Administrative Procedure and Judicial Review in Latin America." In Judicial Review of Administration in Europe, 65–68. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198867609.003.0011.

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This chapter explains administrative procedure and judicial review in Latin America. Judicial review of administrative action has been constitutionalised in many Latin American countries, like Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Panama, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela, and has been the object of special laws regulating the jurisdiction. According to the Constitutions and to the laws regulating the contentious administrative jurisdiction in Latin America, all administrative provisions are subjected to judicial review as it is not possible for any administrative act to escape judicial control. Therefore, the principle applicable is the universal character of the judicial oversight of constitutionality and unlawfulness regarding regulations and administrative acts, which is exercised by the Courts without exception. In almost all Latin American countries, the rules of administrative procedure are regulated through special Administrative Procedure Lasw (APLs), which began to be sanctioned in 1972 (Argentina). In all cases where the courts find that a challenged administrative act infringes the fundamental rights of an individual or corporation, or does not meet the fundamental standards of administrative propriety and fairness, the courts of the contentious administrative jurisdiction in all Latin American countries have the power not only to annul the challenged act but, depending on the nature of the claim filed by the plaintiff, the courts can also award damages for the administrative action.
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STEPHAN, J. F., R. BLANCHET, and B. MERCIER DE LEPINAY. "Northern and Southern Caribbean Festoons (Panama, Colombia-Venezuela and Hispa-Niola - Puerto Rico), Interpreted as Pseudosubductions Induced by the East-West Shortening of the Pericaribbean Continental Frame." In Developments in Geotectonics, 401–22. Elsevier, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-444-42688-8.50022-9.

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Conference papers on the topic "Venezuelans in Panama"

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Tazzo-Rangel, M. Daniela, Bodo Weber, Axel K. Schmitt, Reneé González-Guzmán, and Lutz Hecht. "PERMO-TRIASSIC METAMORPHISM IN THE MÉRIDA ANDES, VENEZUELA – FINAL PANGEA ASSEMBLAGE OR CIRCUM-SUPERCONTINENT SUBDUCTION? NEW INSIGHTS FROM GEOCHRONOLOGY, O-ISOTOPES, AND GEOTHERMOBAROMETRY." In 116th Annual GSA Cordilleran Section Meeting - 2020. Geological Society of America, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2020cd-347384.

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Reports on the topic "Venezuelans in Panama"

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Montes-Uribe, Enrique, Aarón Levi Garavito-Acosta, and María del Pilar Esguerra-Umaña. Venezuela como destino de las exportaciones colombianas: evolución reciente y efecto sobre el panorama exportador y las firmas colombianas. Bogotá, Colombia: Banco de la República, September 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.32468/be.621.

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