Results 41 to 50 of about 55,342 (247)

Quality or Complexion? Experience and Skin Tone as Determinants of Electoral Success in Mexico

open access: yesSocial Science Quarterly, Volume 106, Issue 4, July 2025.
ABSTRACT Objective Recent research suggest that skin color discrimination influences electoral outcomes. This article tests the empirical robustness and generalizability of these findings, incorporating candidates’ quality as an alternative explanation for electoral success. Methods We examine data from the 2024 General Election in Mexico.
René Rejón, Sergio Bárcena
wiley   +1 more source

La gestión del conocimiento desde la perspectiva del pensamiento del mestizaje [PDF]

open access: yes, 2018
In the context of an administrative experience at the School of Languages at the University of Antioquia, they are thought different aspects concerning knowledge management.
Betancourt-Cardona, Miguel-Orlando   +1 more
core   +4 more sources

Mestizaje and conviviality in Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico

open access: yesConvivial Constellations in Latin America, 2018
This paper explores the history and meanings of mestizaje in Latin America, with a focus on Brazil, Colombia and Mexico, and assessing its relationship to practices of conviviality.
P. Wade
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Corporate Educational Philanthropy for Racialized Latin America: A Provocation for More Critical Studies

open access: yesSociology Compass, Volume 19, Issue 6, June 2025.
ABSTRACT Since the 1990s, the corporatization of humanitarian aid and the expansion of private donors have filled the gap left by declining government investment in public education worldwide. As these corporate philanthropies take over work once done by governments, they gain spaces of power.
Laura Balán
wiley   +1 more source

Common Ways to See Differently: Race, Mestizaje, and Criollismo as Seen by Blind People in Chile and Venezuela

open access: yesLatin American Research Review
This article explores understandings of race, mestizaje, and criollismo among blind people in Chile and Venezuela. It demonstrates that visually perceived markers are not self-evidently constitutive of race as a social category.
Luis Angosto-Ferrández
doaj   +1 more source

At a crossroads: Historicizing encounters with new racializations in the Central American and Mexican migratory landscape

open access: yesThe Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology, Volume 30, Issue 1, March 2025.
Abstract This collection explores how contemporary racialization processes shape and are shaped by migration dynamics in the Central American and Mexican context. Marked by histories of migration and displacement, the region has become a critical crossroads for increasingly diverse populations on the move, from journeys of African, Asian, and Caribbean
Nanneke Winters, Caitlin E. Fouratt
wiley   +1 more source

Beyond the Burrito: Foodways of Mexico [PDF]

open access: yes, 2011
Latin American ...
Alarcón, Claudia
core   +1 more source

The Maya Train: Infrastructure and Racial Capitalism in Southeast Mexico

open access: yesAntipode, Volume 57, Issue 1, Page 96-119, January 2025.
Abstract In this paper, I illustrate the interplay between infrastructure and racialised differentiation through the case of the Maya Train—a contentious megaproject aimed at constructing 1,554 km of rail tracks across southeast Mexico, led by the López Obrador federal administration.
Claudia Fonseca Alfaro
wiley   +1 more source

Mestizaje latinoamericano [PDF]

open access: yesRevista Temas Sociológicos, 2017
Resumen:En el acontecer histórico de Chile y América Latina resaltan rasgos mestizos, interculturales, sincréticos. No es algo racial ni una síntesis estática. Elementos diferentes se conjugan e interpelan unos a otros. Son procesos biológicos, sociales, simbólicos. Pueden ser asumidos positivamente en la acción y reflexión cristiana.
openaire   +2 more sources

El mestizaje y la disyunción étnica de la plurinación: una visión personal del caso boliviano

open access: yesTelar, 2016
Este artículo plantea una revisión sobre el discurso del mestizaje como un proceso falsamente homogéneo que oculta identidades y formas indígenas de concebir el mundo.
Javier Sanjinés
doaj  

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