48 research outputs found

    Ann Zulawski, They Eat from Their Labor : Work and Social Change in Colonial Bolivia

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    Uphold the nuclear weapons test moratorium

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    The Trump administration is considering renewing nuclear weapons testing (1), a move that could increase the risk of another nuclear arms race as well as an inadvertent or intentional nuclear war. Following in the long tradition of scientists opposing nuclear weapons due to their harmful effects on both humanity and the planet (2), we ask the U.S. government to desist from plans to conduct nuclear tests. During the Cold War, the United States conducted 1030 nuclear weapons tests, more than all other nuclear-armed nations combined (3). In 1996, the United States signed the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), agreeing not to conduct a nuclear weapons test of any yield (4). The United States has not yet ratified the CTBT but did spearhead the 2016 adoption of UN Security Council Resolution 2310, which calls upon all countries to uphold the object and purpose of the CTBT by not conducting nuclear tests (5). Eight of the nine nuclear-armed states, including the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, have observed a moratorium on nuclear testing since 1998 (3, 4). The ninth, North Korea, responding to international pressure, stopped testing warhead detonations (as opposed to missile flights) in 2017 (6). If the United States ratified the CTBT, joining the 168 countries who have already done so (4), there is a good chance that the other holdout countries would ratify the treaty as well (7)

    Uphold the nuclear weapons test moratorium

    Get PDF
    The Trump administration is considering renewing nuclear weapons testing (1), a move that could increase the risk of another nuclear arms race as well as an inadvertent or intentional nuclear war. Following in the long tradition of scientists opposing nuclear weapons due to their harmful effects on both humanity and the planet (2), we ask the U.S. government to desist from plans to conduct nuclear tests. During the Cold War, the United States conducted 1030 nuclear weapons tests, more than all other nuclear-armed nations combined (3). In 1996, the United States signed the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), agreeing not to conduct a nuclear weapons test of any yield (4). The United States has not yet ratified the CTBT but did spearhead the 2016 adoption of UN Security Council Resolution 2310, which calls upon all countries to uphold the object and purpose of the CTBT by not conducting nuclear tests (5). Eight of the nine nuclear-armed states, including the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, have observed a moratorium on nuclear testing since 1998 (3, 4). The ninth, North Korea, responding to international pressure, stopped testing warhead detonations (as opposed to missile flights) in 2017 (6). If the United States ratified the CTBT, joining the 168 countries who have already done so (4), there is a good chance that the other holdout countries would ratify the treaty as well (7)

    Notas preliminares

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    Introducción a los trabajos que se presentan en el dossier, que constituyen nuevas contribuciones a la historia del comercio y de los comerciantes en el Río de la Plata virreinal.Dossier: Comerciantes en Hispanoamérica durante el Antiguo Régimen y su crisisCentro de Historia Argentina y American

    Notas preliminares

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    Introducción a los trabajos que se presentan en el dossier, que constituyen nuevas contribuciones a la historia del comercio y de los comerciantes en el Río de la Plata virreinal.Centro de Historia Argentina y American

    Acceptable partners: marriage choice in colonial Argentina, 1778 - 1810

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    Marriage, in all human societies, usually occurs between individuals belonging to socially endogomous groups. But there are always important exceptions to this dicta. A society's reactions to these exceptions helps to explain its attitude toward social mobility and social change. This study looks at marriage oppositions in late eighteenth century Rio de la Plata in an attempt to understand better marriage, colonial society and the role of women

    Dos mujeres: límites a la sexualidad femenina en Buenos Aires Colonial

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    Esta es la historia de dos mujeres, dos mujeres transgre-soras que vivieron al mismo tiempo y en el mismo lugar. Ambas eran miembros de la elite local. Ambas desafiaron las convenciones sociales: la primera era la amante de un virrey y la segunda se oponía a contraer matrimonio con el candidato de sus padres y más tarde se casó por segunda vez con un hombre más joven que ella. Aunque sus destinos fueron muy distintos, ambas vivieron hasta ser relativamente viejas: una terminó su vida ocupando..

    Gender, Race and Religion in the Colonization of the Americas

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