- CIENCIAS SOCIALES 533
- CAPITALISMO 391
- DERECHO 291
- ECONOMIA 256
- ECONOMIA POLITICA 161
- DERECHO COMERCIAL 112
- SOCIALISMO 111
- PUBLICACIONES PERIODICAS 109
- CAPITAL SOCIAL 106
- SOCIOLOGIA 102
- Capitalismo 96
- MARXISMO 88
- POLITICA 88
- HISTORIA SOCIAL 80
- DESARROLLO ECONOMICO Y SOCIAL 78
- HISTORIA ECONOMICA 77
- POLITICA ECONOMICA 76
- HISTORIA ARGENTINA 71
- CAPITAL 68
- CLASES SOCIALES 68
- CONDICIONES ECONOMICAS 68
- ANTROPOLOGIA CULTURAL Y SOCIAL 64
- DERECHO POLITICO 61
- TRABAJO 61
- ESTADO 60
- SOCIEDADES COMERCIALES 60
- DEMOCRACIA 57
- GLOBALIZACION 54
- COMUNISMO 51
- CONDICIONES SOCIALES 50
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De la fragmentación de las audiencias a las comunidades transmedia
Published 2021Get full text
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Repensar el bien común y el Estado en tiempos de pandemia
Published 2020Get full text
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Caravelle : Cahiers du monde hispanique et luso-bresilien /
Published 1964Table of Contents: “…Actes Du Colloque sur le Problème des Capitales en Amérique Latine.…”
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Trabajo agrícola : experiencias y resignificación de las identidades en el campo argentino /
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El pensamiento de Mariátegui en la escena contemporánea siglo XXI /
Published 2021Table of Contents: “…Miradas sobre la racionalización capitalista y sus implicaciones en las clases sociales subalternas y populares…”
Texto completo. [Consulta : 2022/10/11].
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THE UNION BUREAUCRACY IN THE FIRST RUSSIAN REVOLUTION: FROM THE ZUBATOV’S POLICE UNION TO THE GAPON ASSEMBLY
Published 2018“…The peculiarity of the Russian experience during the years immediately prior to the 1905 revolution resides in the fact that it did not take place, as was usually the case in other countries, by granting workers freedom of strike, assembly and association and through the gradual cooptation of their ruling stratum by the bourgeois state, but as a result of an initiative of the Ministry of the Interior, and within it of the Secret Police (Okhrana), as opposed to the official policy of Tsarism, which did not legalize the unions until 1906, as well as that of the Ministry of Finance, which controlled the factory inspectorate and was particularly sensitive to the pressures of the capitalists. The contradictions of that policy blew up with the massacre perpetrated by Tsarism during the “Bloody Sunday” of January 9, 1905, which began the first Russian revolution and led to the partial legalization of trade union activity.…”
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