78 research outputs found

    List of Reviewers

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    Equipo editorial Revista Luciérnaga Comunicación No.20

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    EDITORA Mónica Valle Flórez Politécnico Colombiano Jaime Isaza Cadavid        Email:[email protected]    ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1803-1115 EDITOR ASOCIADO  Francisco Jesús Ortiz Alvarado Universidad Autónoma de San Luís Potosí-México Email: [email protected] COMITÉ CIENTÍFICO / EDITORIAL Jesús Galindo Cáceres Miembro del Sistema Nacional de Investigadores del Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología de México, SNI-CONACY  Email: [email protected] Allan Burns Universidad de la Florida - EEUU  Email: [email protected]            ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6024-0020 María Teresa Quiroz Velasco Universidad de Lima - Perú Email: [email protected]      ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5640-4800 Luis Deltell Escolar España- Universidad Complutense de Madrid - España  Email: [email protected]  ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5230-1409      Ángel Páez Universidad de Zulia Venezuela   Email: [email protected]    ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0924-3506 María Rebeca Padilla de la Torre México Universidad Aguascalientes- México Email:[email protected]          ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5881-3958 Carlos Andrés Arango Lopera Facultad de Ciencias Sociales-Comunicación Social. Universidad Católica de Oriente               Email: [email protected]    ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2120-3304 Erika Jaillier Castrillón  Escuela de Ciencias Sociales. Facultad de Comunicación Social Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana – Medellín-Colombia      Email: [email protected]    ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6974-0275 Agrivalca R. Canelón S. Directora. Maestría en Comunicación Estratégica. Facultad de Comunicación Universidad de La Sabana, Colombia  Email: [email protected]   ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-6368-5268 Asistente Editorial Isabel Restrepo García Comunicadora Audiovisual Email: [email protected] Editor Digital y Diseñador Nelson Cortés A. Diseñador Visual mail: [email protected] Realizadores Audiovisuales Mateo Ortiz Minotas Comunicador Audiovisual Email: [email protected] Isabel Restrepo García Comunicadora Audiovisual Email: [email protected] Santiago Flórez Román Comunicador Audiovisual Email: [email protected] Gestión  Open Journal Systems Juliana Quiroz Estrada Bibliotecóloga Email: [email protected] Maquetador web Nelson Cortés A Traductores Inglés: María Elena GutiérrezEmail: [email protected]  Portugués: Nicolás Enrique Barreda TorresEmail: [email protected] Autores David Cuenca Orozco, Esmeralda Castañeda de la Cueva, Guillermo Rodríguez Martínez, Jairo Sojo Gómez, Fernando Marroquín Ciendúa, Andrés Felipe Giraldo, Daniel Hermelin, Mónica María Valle Flórez, Álvaro Ramírez, Wilfredo José Rafael Illas Ramírez, Rafael Vergara Varela

    Apresentação

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    Joseph Willson

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    24-2ClaimsReport : Petition of J. Willson. [305] Indian battle in 1791 at Fort Recovery.1836-17

    Receipts and expenditures of United States, 1858

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    35-2Receipts and Expenditures. [1003] Year ending 30 June 1858; Indian expenses.1859-2

    Were we terrorists? History, terrorism, and the French Resistance

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    This article argues that scholars of historical terrorism should abandon the practice of defining the phenomenon in favour of prioritising past understandings of terrorist violence. Research into the history of terrorism often uses a definition informed by contemporary concerns to reveal previous incidents and outbreaks of terrorism. This approach speaks more to the concerns of the present than those of the past. We must refocus our attention on how people in history understood terrorism and to whom and to what they applied the term. This approach can open avenues of investigation into neglected or sensitive subjects, with the example of the violence of the French Resistance explored here. Historians have rejected the use of the term “terrorism” to describe resistance action, preferring instead to use military or paramilitary terminology. However, resistance violence was understood in several ways, and the resisters' own rejection of the terrorist label was not total

    Contribution of records management to audit opinions and accountability in government

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    Background: Auditing can support national democratic processes, national development and government good will. Supreme Audit Institutions (SAI), such as offices of Auditor General, publish consolidated reports on audit outcomes for local authorities, government departments, parastatals and related public entities. These reports identify broad areas analysed during audit exercises that often include financial management, governance, asset management, risk management, revenue collection and debt recovery. They highlight trends that were detected during audit exercises at the end of a financial year. The reports further show how records and records management affect audit exercises as well as financial management within the audited institutions. Objectives: The intention of the research was to ascertain the contribution of records management to audit opinions and accountability in financial management in Zimbabwean government entities. Method: A document analysis of Comptroller and Auditor General of Zimbabwe (CAGZ)’s reports was used to identify the types of decisions and recommendations (audit opinions) issued, in juxtaposition to the records management issues raised. Results and Conclusion: This study shows that there is a strong correlation between records management concerns and audit opinions raised by the CAGZ’s narrative audit reports. Inadequate records management within government entities was associated with adverse and qualified opinions and, in some cases, unqualified opinions that had emphases of matter. There was a causal loop in which lack of documentary evidence of financial activities was the source cause of poor accounting and poor audit reports. Errors resulting from incomplete or inaccurate records meant that government entities were not showing a true picture of their financial status and their financial statements could be materially misstated. As an important monitoring and control system, records management should be integrated into the accounting and auditing processes of government entities

    The role of phenolic compounds on olive oil aroma release

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    In this study, atmospheric pressure chemical ionisation-mass spectrometry (APCI-MS) was successfully applied to understand the effect of phenolic compounds on the release of olive oil aroma compounds. Eight aroma compounds were monitored under in-vivo and in-vitro dynamic conditions in olive oil with and without the addition of virgin olive oil (VOO) biophenols. Three model olive oils (MOOs) were set up with identical volatile compounds concentrations using a refined olive oil (ROO). Phenolics were extracted from VOOs and were added to two MOOs in order to obtain two different concentrations of phenolic compounds (P+ = 354 mg kg−1; P++ = 593 mg kg−1). Another MOO was without VOO biophenols (P−). Phenolic compounds impacted both the intensity and time of aroma release. In the in-vivo study, 1-penten-3-one, trans-2-hexenal and esters had lower release in the presence of higher levels of biophenols after swallowing. In contrast, linalool and 1-hexanol had a greater release. The more hydrophobic compounds had a longer persistence in the breath than the hydrophilic compounds. VOO phenolics-proline-rich proteins complexes could explain the binding of aroma compounds and consequently their decrease during analysis and during organoleptic assessment of olive oil
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