Archives - Page 2
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July - December
Vol. 7 No. 14 (2021)In this issue of the Political Science, Globality and Citizenship Journal, a scientific journal edited by the Faculty of Political Sciences and International Relations of the Autonomous University of Nuevo León, eleven articles are presented that address the problems derived from the health contingency caused by COVID -19 from a State, Government or Human Rights perspective; and other relevant and current issues, such as electoral crimes, the right to the city, women's rights, among others. The texts presented in this issue are the result of rigorous research that provide important ideas for the deepening of the academic debate on each of the topics. With this, the Political, Globality and Citizenship Scientific Journal continues to position itself as an important reference for the academic and scientific community, nationally and internationally, in order to generate useful knowledge for the university community.
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January - June
Vol. 7 No. 13 (2021)Latin America is experiencing a health crisis caused by COVID-19; political crisis in some of their countries derived from popular and indigenous mobilizations against neoliberal economic measures and from not feeling represented by their governments; economic crisis caused by contraction in global demand and supply chains; also a humanitarian crisis due to the massive movement of migrants and refugees in search of improving their quality of life. Therefore, governments have great challenges to respond to health, social, fiscal and monetary measures. In this issue of the Political Science, Globality and Citizenship Journal, the reader will have access to ten articles that delve into topics that are essential to society, mainly in what concerns the axes of government, political communication, foreign trade, alternative methods of conflict resolution, migration, entrepreneurship and law.
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July - December
Vol. 6 No. 12 (2020)At present, the world is experiencing great challenges in terms of public health, but also in finding new formulas for economic development. The political systems of diverse nations are challenged to find sustainable solutions that meet the expectations of nations. In this issue of the magazine "Politics, Globality and Citizenship", the reader will have access to eleven articles that delve into topics that are essential to find the institutional mechanisms that allow a better social coexistence among individuals who are part of a plural society and also between the nations. They correspond to studies that have been carried out in a rigorous way and with an examination of cases that contribute to a necessary debate in today's academy.
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January - June
Vol. 6 No. 11 (2020)This new socio-spatial, dynamic and complex reality raises multiple challenges, readings and valuations around multicultural coexistence and social development in host cities, attracting the interest of social sciences in Latin America, which has resulted in a greater number of research projects, specialization courses, study centers and national and international interregional and transatlantic collaboration that reflect on migration, coexistence and social incorporation. These changes have led to old emigration countries becoming migratory destinations (Spain and Portugal; Mexico), and conversely, old immigration destinations (Venezuela) have become expulsion of immigrants (Gissi, Ghio and Silva, 2019 ), or that they harbor both emigration and immigration, a reality that became evident in the Iberian Peninsula during the last world crisis (Padilla and Ortiz 2012) or in the new migratory context in Latin America (Peru, Colombia, Ecuador, Brazil), in the actuality very marked by the Venezuelan exodus. Inclusively, it has become evident how political and electoral processes increasingly influence immigration.
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July - December
Vol. 5 No. 10 (2019)Politics, Globality and Citizenship, is presented as a scientific journal whose main objective is to disseminate research results articles that contribute to strengthening the spectrum of scientific knowledge in political science and international relations. For this, the journal's editorial process was restructured, all documents are submitted to arbitration processes under the double-blind modality, the editorial criteria of international publications were included, its ethical policy was adjusted, and editorial practices were improved. , tending that the journal be evaluated and indexed in the different databases that generate impact on a global level.
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January - June
Vol. 5 No. 9 (2019)Various authors have identified the field of human rights as fertile grounds for interdisciplinary work. A frequent starting point for the study of universal rights is the field of international law (and with that, international relations), yet the focus of this issue is national and thus not primarily concerned with the international aspect of HR. The analysis borrows much from a sociological approach, since the focus is often on “the societal processes and relations that shape and define how human rights are generated, defined and employed in specific social and political arenas”. Besides law and sociology, our interdisciplinary assemble of authors employs perspectives from communication sciences and political science.