“The” Colombian Navigator
Author : John Purdy
Publisher :
Page : 566 pages
File Size : 13,81 MB
Release : 1823
Category : Pilot guides
ISBN :
Author : John Purdy
Publisher :
Page : 566 pages
File Size : 13,81 MB
Release : 1823
Category : Pilot guides
ISBN :
Author : John Purdy
Publisher :
Page : 230 pages
File Size : 49,44 MB
Release : 1823
Category : Pilot guides
ISBN :
Author : John Purdy
Publisher :
Page : 370 pages
File Size : 32,13 MB
Release : 1839
Category :
ISBN :
Author : John Purdy
Publisher :
Page : 294 pages
File Size : 25,90 MB
Release : 1839
Category : Pilot guides
ISBN :
Author : Nancy P. Appelbaum
Publisher : UNC Press Books
Page : 321 pages
File Size : 43,94 MB
Release : 2016-05-18
Category : History
ISBN : 1469627450
The nineteenth century was an era of breathtakingly ambitious geographic expeditions across the Americas. The seminal Chorographic Commission of Colombia, which began in 1850 and lasted about a decade, was one of Latin America's most extensive. The commission's mandate was to define and map the young republic and its resources with an eye toward modernization. In this history of the commission, Nancy P. Appelbaum focuses on the geographers' fieldwork practices and visual production as the men traversed the mountains, savannahs, and forests of more than thirty provinces in order to delineate the country's territorial and racial composition. Their assumptions and methods, Appelbaum argues, contributed to a long-lasting national imaginary. What jumps out of the commission's array of reports, maps, sketches, and paintings is a portentous tension between the marked differences that appeared before the eyes of the geographers in the field and the visions of sameness to which they aspired. The commissioners and their patrons believed that a prosperous republic required a unified and racially homogeneous population, but the commission's maps and images paradoxically emphasized diversity and helped create a "country of regions." By privileging the whiter inhabitants of the cool Andean highlands over those of the boiling tropical lowlands, the commission left a lasting but problematic legacy for today's Colombians.
Author : Julián D. López-Murcia
Publisher : Springer Nature
Page : 256 pages
File Size : 29,13 MB
Release : 2021-12-04
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 3030816745
This book tackles the question of how to characterise and account for recentralisation in Colombia between central and lower levels of government across a 26-year period. Around the world, the COVID-19 pandemic has once again put the distribution of responsibilities, resources, and authority between different levels of government at the heart of political debate. This book brings this issue to light as a topic central to the study of public administration.Drawing on extensive fi eldwork with more than a hundred interviews with former presidents, ministers, members of congress, governors, local mayors and subnational public offi cials, as well as documentary sources, it begins with a historical account of recentralisation processes in the world. It then proposes a theoretical framework to explain these processes, before tracing and carefully comparing recentralisation episodes in Colombia using theory-guided process tracing.
Author : Forrest Hylton
Publisher : Verso Books
Page : 258 pages
File Size : 25,87 MB
Release : 2020-05-05
Category : History
ISBN : 1789602610
Colombia is the least understood of Latin American countries. Its human tragedy, which features terrifying levels of kidnapping, homicide and extortion, is generally ignored or exploited. In this urgent new work Forrest Hylton, who has extensive first-hand experience of living and working in Colombia, explores its history of 150 years of political conflict, characterized by radical-popular mobilization and reactionary repression. Evil Hour in Colombia shows how patterns of political conflict, from the mid-nineteenth century to today's guerilla narco-traffickers and paramilitaries, explain the wear currently destroying Colombian lives, property, communities and territory. In doing so, it traces how Colombia's "coffee capitalism" gave way to the cattle and cocaine republic of the 1980s, and how land, wealth and power have been steadily accumulated by the light-skinned top of the social pyramid through a brutal combination of terror, expropriation and economic depression.
Author : John Purdy
Publisher :
Page : 338 pages
File Size : 16,62 MB
Release : 1839
Category :
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 718 pages
File Size : 29,2 MB
Release : 1827
Category :
ISBN :
Author : John Purdy
Publisher :
Page : 350 pages
File Size : 34,3 MB
Release : 1823
Category : Pilot guides
ISBN :