Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Wedding Poems Used Forwish Tree

The Criminal (Carlos Calderón Fajardo)

His father is still hiding behind the trees of the garden.

- Say yes, "she hides the boy says to his mother. Twelve years is that child and pokes his head through Cucardas roses and to see if his father is behind the flowers, vegetation.

- Tell me if you hide Clotilde, tell him to hide.

"No, you have not seen your father, you'll never see because they have been traveling," she replied.

The boy ran to look at the garden. Clotilde was always right, no one was there. Nor after the ficus in the street and at home on a sofa was a newspaper two years ago had not been touched and a pair of slippers desilachadas. Clotilde said nothing more. The boy kept running, this time by a passage where he thought he saw the head of his father and also at that time had to accept the truth that his father had been traveling for so long that it was true that he had seen walking down the hall, I could not be true that his father had just read the newspaper sitting on a chair with legs crossed slippers on.

travel is gone, he thought the boy, thought so and said that will one day return travel from far away, after a long period of absence and slippers that are there. He did not like to grab the newspaper from his father.

is on your desktop and is not. The child is glued to the glass window in the old paper yellow wall. In the recessed trim moth lands where the sunshine of the afternoon, is also bleached portraits, and the child Clotilde says, but she did not want to talk.

He, his father is inside the wall, and what went into the wall one day have to leave there to say it will take to the stage, children do not pay the ticket at the stadium. Cotilde But let that be the case, he hates everything that hurts the child. Clotilde hates the blue wall because the child believes he is inside that wall, and hate when that child is talking to that wall. And the child does not know who his father is on the other hand, it has not gone on the road, that does not mean what it's called the site name where it is.

Dad, you got inside that wall and I never saw her again.

And so this man has to go some day the wall, you may leave when the child does not hit his head on the top of the table, perhaps already left and that is why your child sees. A Clotilde likes to say that the house has been so empty that looks like a square after midnight. And no one shows up, nor anyone who comes out of nowhere. Then the boy replied:
- Mom If so, then many times you slam the door on the inside after dark, why you pull like crazy latches and bolts, why do you say you they do not mess which are outside the walls.
Clotilde, at night, gently pulls back the curtains of the room and looks out to see if there is someone on the street, see if a man behind the outdoor garden plants, if you travel has been hidden behind the ficus, but no one, only one light enters the room and goes to the dining room.

But the child does not see it. He is on the street. He fully recognizes. He knows how to smile. Recognizes his mustache, the cadence of his steps. Know it's there, coming year after year, and stands in the shadows, in the corner, on the sidewalk after gladioli, after the ficus.

The child sees every day from the window. Clotilde is asleep.

The child knows that this man called Demetrius. Demetrius is dressed as the child knows that he dresses. I can not remember what his voice is.

The boy opens the door and out into the street. Clotilde's eyes are closed on purpose. Can not do anything. Now you can avoid it. He knows that if you open your eyes cry immediately. You can not open my eyes because it will have no other thing to run after the child and stop it. He runs

strode down the darkened shred. Demetrius

while going ahead. He disappears and appears at the same time.

foci at the tip of the posts also appear and disappear behind the trees, and the street is opaque, almost no light and everything is cradled by the sea breeze comes up the cliff, because the child knows about is a square that opens timid between spherical lights and green seats toward it runs at full speed.

runs to somewhere but not out of that rag. Demetrio waits hidden inside the iodized air. It has always been there.

The child knows that Demetrius is back bringing the world's most beautiful object hidden inside the bag.

many times the child has guessed the existence of this wonderful object.

And Demetrius is there. Sure it's there. It has always been there. Never has been. Saca

what lurks in the sack. It's on the ground.

Child puts a couple of stones, one on each side, and he stops at the center between two stones.

The child knows that between this man and where to watch it, that between Demetrius and he is twelve steps, twelve fine steps, twelve steps astray, counted countless times, so you can not establish how many there have been twelve steps . Thus the child has the steps again.

Extend your legs as much as you can to tell.

One .. two ... three ... twelve.

The child is standing in front of the man and holds his gaze. Then

back in place.

Child torso bends slightly forward, your arms loose, open hands to the knees.

His father kicks the ball.

(Calderón Fajardo, Carlos. He who dies blink. Lima: San Marcos, 1999)

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Medicare Aprroved Bathtubs

"Self" (Lourdes Flores Nano) Cosmogony

occasion of a new electoral defeat, Lourdes Flores Nano released a song with pretensions of radial boom.


Dad taught me what should I do if I lose an election for the third time

that Castro is out front and as it is

say we won in the JNE.

If I go to dance I will not allow

Tongo that get too close to me.

him come Galarreta and Chipoco

and no matter what "extreme caution ".
The case is q ue until now I think I lost,

insurance Jaime Bayly will laugh at me.
Why do I always lose the election? First it was because of my dad.
I always lose the election. Alan I won the election table.
I always lose the election? He challenges the proceedings at the royal aunt.
I always lose the election. Heavens, what a situation!
Dad taught me what should I do if I lose an election for a third time.

I will not suggest an electoral fraud,

let it do those of the town. ;

If we go down the street passing anything

Magdalena to speak on the record.

And, in any concentiré not

FS wins that's not right.
The fact is that so far nothing worked,

sure my father forgot something.
Why do I always lose the election? Bedoya, tell me what happened.
I always lose the election. Too bad Kouri has been crossed.
I always lose the election. Salinas this was your strategy.
I always lose the election. This really can be a good problem ...


Sunday, October 24, 2010

Justice Of Peace Wedding Queens



evening approaches in the window while the other side of the room and collapsing universes are born with the will of his hands, then suspect the nature of reality and the world on the other side of the door, convinced of the imagination to its limits with the parallel plane in which the two live: you can not stop time but slow it down, but can not flee to hide in the small shelter there again when their eyes meet, the moment when the singularity of their loneliness bursts into a new cosmos ever .

The sun goes down the window and they pretend to be gods creating worlds in the image of his desire ...

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Keratin Treatment Columbus Ohio

Water, sanitation and local governments

On Monday 20 September, the Chamber of Commerce Lima (CCL) held a forum entitled "Access to safe water and sanitation, the sustainability of its operations: The role of local government", which brought together specialists from various fields to discuss current and future management water in Lima. Furthermore, six of nine candidates submitted their proposals to address the management issues and coverage of potable water.

CCL's president, Carlos Chahud, opened the session by describing the current state of access to drinking water in Lima, said that an estimated 250 thousand people have no recourse in the capital and that this related to unfulfilled goals in the reversal of social inequalities as additional data, said the index of inequality in the country shows that social distances neighboring countries like Bolivia and Ecuador are getting shorter.

On this view, Víctor López Orihuela, Vice Chairman of Sedapal, presented interesting data on the status of water and sanitation services provided by Sedapal.


70%
Background, current status and projections for 2014 water service (Sedapal)

July 2006
August 2010
2014 Plan
Coverage
90.1%
92.7%
100%
Water unbilled
38.2%
37.7%
30%
Micrometering
71%
100%
Continuity of service
20.7 h / d
21.7 h / d
23 h / d

The figures show slight gains in coverage, reduction of unbilled water and continuity of service is concerned, and a decrease in the area of \u200b\u200bmetering (installation of household meters) between July 2006 and August this year, ie, the current government and its flagship Water for All (PAPT) have not achieved the expected goals and have even lost step in extending the service despite having almost doubled the budget of S /. 1 099 700 000 (during the government of Alejandro Toledo) to S /. 1 999 million (over what government will García).

A positive aspect of the investment made during this administration has been the creation of mega-projects that will support the sustainability of water services to Lima in the future: Huascacocha, Huachipa and North Branch, Taboada, La Chira , among others.

However investment in infrastructure, the government has shown little concern for institutional restructuring and capacity building techniques in accordance with the present problems of water resource management. From this point of view, international cooperation is an exceptional source of support to overcome the toughest obstacles in expanding coverage of potable water and sanitation, therefore, the chairman of the FTC highlighted the work of the German technical and financial cooperation through agencies such as GTZ and KfW.

fact, one of the most important programs developed by the GTZ and KfW is the Water Supply and Sewerage (PROAGUA) established in 1996, whose main objective is "to contribute to improving the capacities of sectoral actors to manage sanitation services in a sustainable manner. " Michael Rosenauer, and PROAGUA GTZ representative, was responsible for presenting the experiences in program development and the problems he sees as fundamental to the management of drinking water.

According to Rosenauer, there are three main problems in building a sustainable service system for Metropolitan Lima:

  1. The inconsistency in the legal framework is the main obstacle to establishing clear roles and responsibilities different social actors linked to the water getión, not only on service access, including in relation to urban development, territorial and environmental.
  2. Inability to build and strengthen institutional capacities and job skills that would achieve efficiency and efficiency in public administration.
  3. There is a gap between public investment and the upward curve of the needs of the population. There is a historical gap not yet traced between the resources invested by the state and the growing public demand for basic sanitation.
Taking as a starting point this analysis suggests that a group of solutions to these problems would be to establish mechanisms linking of shared responsibilities in corporate governance and planning are concerned.

A grades speaking, governance problems could be solved by making exploitation contracts where clearly define the responsibilities of each actor involved, establishing a system of accountability, a code of good governance and multi directory in EPS's.

Regarding the planifiación, it is necessary that the EPS's develop Master Plans Optimized, that regional and local governments have management plans related to general public policies, and budgets are technically sustainable and consistent with the proposed plans .

Referring to the topics addressed above, José Salazar, chairman of the board of SUNASS, said the main challenges face the Metropolitan Municipality of Lima are nine:

  1. Define land based on the watershed. Coordinate
  2. municipal works with local operators.
  3. increase water supplies to 30 years for ordering the expansion of Lima. Reduce
  4. ecological disaster risk by mine tailings.
  5. Investing in water mills along the basin. Capitalizing
  6. mayor's political leadership to create a culture of water.
  7. Reduce pollution by garbage, sewage in water bodies.
  8. promote wastewater reuse ecobusiness .. Promote new
  9. investments in generation and maintenance of water bodies.
According to Salazar, the SUNASS intends to collaborate with local governments becoming a stable partner local authorities to achieve universal service, sustainability of the SPE's and democratic governance. To achieve this raises a number of measures among which the creation of a coordinating committee of mayors to the river Rimac-Lurin-Chillon, creating a Aquafondo for investment in projects and a partnership with the FTC and local governments to promote good governance.

comments about the forum

Attend such meetings is always interesting, even if the organization was initiated by an institution such as the FTC would not apparently greater role in water management in Lima, but it reveals the concern of an industry that can contribute much to the subject. However, as often happens in such events, the presentations are short and relatively superficial analysis. For example, none of the speakers touched on the subject of the tariff structure and the need to reform to achieve greater equity between service users. Neither played in depth the issue of territorial reorganization, or what will happen to the service tanker trucks that supply water to the outlying towns of the city.

Despite missing issues, the forum made interesting ideas to solve specific problems. Two key concepts were about the exhibition: integrated watershed management and the institutional stakeholders.

All speakers came more or less the same conclusion: it is impossible to think of water management in Lima if not intended to articulate interests, needs and resources of actors and territories of the three watersheds that feed the capital, namely the river Rimac, Lurin and Chillon.

Also agreed that water management in Lima not only borne by the government, there are a huge number of stakeholders with needs, interests, goals and agendas of their own, with which it is necessary to conclude. The biggest obstacle in this regard, as noted by Rosenauer, is unclear regulations we have and the limited institutional capacity of government agencies to implement it consistently. These problems result in a confusing institutional environment for social and private sectors end up spending over rules that ignore or face bureaucratic hurdles. What is worrying about this aspect is that the government does not make the reforms of the case, since the new law water resources is not very clear in establishing certain responsibilities (eg, conflict resolution mechanisms) and on the other hand, maintains a rural bias that previous laws also incorporated.

To conclude you can make two final comments. First, the unreliability of the figures presented by Sedapal is disturbing. First, because the averages conceal persistent problems presented have been unsuccessful, but intend to make up to justify a program has very low water for all. It is true that progress has been made, but the reality is that there are many areas in Lima that have no connection to the public Sedapal and worse, water quality and the service is of poor quality. It is totally inaccurate to say that the continuity of the service spends 21 hours / day, as in several districts of the capital, the service is less than 8 hours / day. This apparent paradox is explained when it is averaged with areas where continuity is 24 hours, therefore, the results do not reflect reality.

This leads us to raise another issue, that of the unreliability of the figures of Sedapal, INEI and other state agencies even contradict each other. With such disparate data is veery hard to measure the progress of outreach programs and improving the quality of water service. As

second and last comment is to mention the candidates proposals made at the meeting. Unless the candidates plans and Social Force A-PPC, the other candidates raised these limited proposals, poor and very little ambitious for a mega-city like Lima.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Puss And Blood From Cats Ear

The place of production of knowledge in the social sciences, Wallerstein and Chakrabarty

This paper is a comparative approach to the positions of Dipesh Chakrabarty and Immanuel Wallerstein on "the place" of knowledge production of the Social Sciences. This "place" has different meanings in the texts of each of the authors, which does not mean that there is no relationship between them, on the contrary, can be seen as complementary and, to some extent similar. Chakrabarty refers to the theoretical structures on which the social sciences and humanities develop a knowledge of reality, in this sense, this author has an approach to epistemology that accompanies any research on society and history. For its part, Wallerstein focuses on structural aspects of the organization of the spaces where academic knowledge and how it transformed (or not) from the need for multidisciplinary studies, also, the author explores the limits of classical social sciences and the need to expand and "open" to other specialties that may find useful.

Both authors refer to the university as a privileged space of knowledge production, although Wallerstein comes to talk of a restructuring phase of the space as "principal organizational basis of scholarly research" [ 1] Chakrabarty and relates to the university as a place where it is very difficult (almost impossible) to develop knowledge is not Europeanized. However, they recognize that college is the institution of knowledge production par excellence.

Let's see what offers each one of the authors and then buy proposals and make a comment.

"History": the language of the modern-European

In postcolonial and artifact of history: Who speaks for the last "Indian" ? [2] Dipesh Chakrabarty examines the issue of self-representation of "Indians" in history, making a preliminary analysis of what this "story." For the author, the academic (drawn from universities) about the story continues to make "Europe" [3] as the sovereign subject of the story, which is more universal and becomes subject to other stories (like the history of the India). Those "other stories" become changes in European history, so they are in a position of subordination in front of her.

On this subject, the author notes that there are at least two symptoms of subordination in the construction of historical knowledge Third: First, Third World historians feel the need to rely on knowledge about " history "made in Europe, while historians of that latitude does not. Second, in reference to the first symptom is a paradox of social science in the Third World that is to consider the knowledge developed in Europe as universal, that is also useful in understanding our societies, even if it was produced in and for society , in Chakrabarty's words: despite their inherent ignorance "we."

Regarding this last point, which suggests the author is that Third World social science sees Europe as the only known theoretical society, so that the other stories are the result of research empirically supported by a prefabricated theoretical framework to meet Europe.

Using a reading of Husserl, Chakrabarty points out that what's behind it is a Eurocentric claim that Western thought can know the truth through absolute theoretical categories, which are products of abstraction and, while , inputs for a theory that reveals the world as it is, allowing a practice whose purpose is to elevate man (humanity) through universal scientific reason. Similarly, the author adds, Marx raises a similar epistemological proposal to declare the "capital" as a philosophical category universal and theoretically more appropriate to hear the story. Thus, societies can be recognized from the similarities or differences from this category are proposed. And not only that. According to the reading of Marx by Chakrabarty, the most advanced societies in the capitalist elements carry pre-capitalist societies, because from them will be built ("evolved") bourgeois society.

For the author, and Husserl and Marx speak in a spirit of historicism, however, Marxism has failed to develop narratives about the story focusing on the theme of "historic transition" that have influenced historical narratives the Third World.

This transition is focused on key issues such as development, modernization, capitalism. In this sense, historical narratives are full of transitions Third incomplete [4] and truncated processes.

reading the history of India in terms of lack or absence is due to the British conquest imposed a way of understanding the history that brought together "the last Indian" in a single "pre-modern past." This imposition of the linear view of time was a homogenization of what was the Indian before the arrival of the British: medieval, feudal and despotic. Of course, this was set up as the antonym of this colonial, modern, capitalist and "respect for the law" (Constitution). The latter, says the author, made the Indian "legal subject, ruled by a government sensitive to the pressure of private property [...] and public opinion, and supervised by the judiciary [...]" . That is, there was a depersonalization of power and transformation (or perhaps the creation) of public and private spheres according to the model of modern nation states.

accepted construction of history as linearity condition that evolves from the medieval, feudal, despotic to a modern, capitalist, constitutional allowed to establish an identification field going from one pole to another (from the premodern to modern), accompanied by a teleology whose peak values \u200b\u200bwere modern English. It is from this area that Indian nationalists set their ideological and identity. However, the "Indian" as the author, was always defined by its lack, absence or inadequacies. Thus, the Indians (especially those in the lowest rungs of society) had no ability to become citizens, from the perspective of model European modern humans, so the British imperial ideology chose subjects considered.

legal subjects This condition was accepted by the nationalist discourse as a prelude to citizenship and the nation-state control [5] . Consistent with this, the nationalist thought believed that the "individual rights" and "equality" were abstract universal categories, so it could be "Indian" and "citizen" at the same time after independence.

far the author has described and analyzed premises of modern discourse on the history and how they have affected our everyday imagery and national narratives, allowing the emergence of histories of deficiencies, failures and shortcomings. What then is to look Chakrabarty proposes alternative narratives, stories prior to the "history" "do not consider the link between the state and the citizen as the peak of the construction of the social." (p. 7). The author's interest is in the practices that occur in the private sphere, within the family. According

Chakrabarty, is a division idealistic trichotomous upon which rests the modern political structures : The State, civil society and the family (Bourgeois) is in this latter area that the Indians challenged the ideas of privacy and individualism in Europe, by questioning marriage as a partnership and family as a secular construction. Nationalist discourse raised the differentiation of the Indian (the same) from the discussion on the concept of "freedom", which allowed the Indians to give a position to talk.

The theme of "freedom" was directly related to the status of women within the family. According to the author, the Victorian idea of \u200b\u200bwomen as wife-mate put in between the bases extended family, then turned to the woman in a modern subject asserts his individuality over family relationships. What was the nationalist discourse was an ideal modern woman india educated enough to appreciate the modern rules of the body and the state but at the same time, submissive and selfless.

Thus, bourgeois ideas about domestic life were modified using two strategies: First, as already mentioned, putting the values \u200b\u200bof the patriarchal extended family to the nuclear bourgeois thereby are fighting the idea of \u200b\u200bmodern privacy. Second, joint within the family time "sacred" and "secular" in the ideal woman "truly polite, modest and India ", which is considered a good omen for the return of the principle embodied by the goddess Lakshmi (goddess of domestic welfare). In this way, they developed a form of collective memory that made one side the structure of modern historical narrative: secular and linear.

However, the modern nationalist discourse subordinated narratives produced from the domestic to the national history that was being built, which is aligned with the European world history, ie, becomes secondary.

Chakrabarty mentioned that the subject of history "India" itself is divided by a double bind: The dual character the Indian peasantry is to modernize and modernizing elite, ie, object (peasants) and subject (elite) of modernization, and, because of this characteristic, their way of self-representation can only be an imitation of the European model as such, can only speak from the narrative of the transition that always end up favoring the modern.

Hence, the author argues that the inability of the subaltern to speak as a "theory" in academic language: "As long as one continues to operate within the discourse of" history "produced at the headquarters of the university, you can not simply depart of the deep collusion between 'history' and (s) account (s) of citizenship, bourgeois public and private life and the nation-state. " (p. 13), in other words, the language of Modernity.

Why is taught the "history" in schools, asks the author. The answer he finds is that both European imperialism and Third World nationalisms have achieved universal nation-state idea as a political community. To legitimize the universal character of the nation state have required a number of institutions like the university.

However, Chakrabarty says that we all understand that European history can open a possibility of a policy and partnership project between dominant and subaltern histories: provincialization of Europe. This is from a radical critique of liberalism in its bureaucratic conceptions of citizenship, the modern state and bourgeois private life.

provincializing The draft document how Europe is "reason-science-universal" Europe has been instituted as such, try to see the consolidation of the property rather than deny or relativize. On the other hand, the project includes the recognition that the allocation of European modern adjective itself is part of global history, which is integrated into the narrative of European imperialism, also, understanding that Third World nationalism, such as modernizing ideologies have contributed to the "monopolization" of the modern and European.

The idea is to write in the history of modernity the ambivalences, contradictions, the use of force and ironies that accompany it. (p. 14)

Restructuring Social Sciences

In Open the Social Sciences Immanuel Wallerstein ago an analysis of the changes that have been the subjects assigned to the life sciences during the second stage of the twentieth century. The author argues that social sciences have changed and continue in various forms, from the scope of its objects of study to the institutional frameworks within which it develops, the most important university.

According to the author, three processes changed the structure of the social sciences after 1945: First, the bipolarity formed by United States and Soviet Union after the Second World War, the force United States clearly influenced by the definition of problems and how social science should deal with them. On the other hand, this period occurs political reaffirmation of non-European countries, which meant the questioning of several of the premises of the social sciences because they were part of political trends in a bygone era.

Second, population growth and economic expansion led to increased investment in science and, consequently, the social sciences. Wallerstein points out that investment rates were small, but the absolute numbers were very high, this allowed the development of social sciences centralized clusters, ie, he a process of concentration of resources, skills and information in places where investment was much higher (eg United States): " Thus, economic expansion strengthened global standing in the social sciences scientific paradigms underlying the achievements technology behind it. However, the end of the political dominance of the West over the world significa7ba while the entry of new voices on stage, not just of politics but of social science. " (p. 39)

Third, expansion of university systems was the multiplication of social scientists and therefore, social pressure for increased specialization, because the scholars sought to define their "originality or at least its social utility" , in the words of the author. The increase of social scientists led to a series of intrusions reciprocal disciplinary fields of each other, which began to blur the boundaries between disciplines.

All these processes affect the organizational structure of social sciences at least three levels of restructuring: The first level is the border of the super-fields of social sciences, which have been redefinitions within the university structure due the emergence new disciplines on the one hand, required resources for its financing and on the other, appear as intersections of different disciplines (such as ethnohistory). The second level is that of the boundaries of social science, a product of the process described in the previous section. The third level is the flight research activities of the institutional environment of the university, according to the author's non-teaching areas of research have increased their presence at the expense of the university, and consequently, the university was losing a recovery in nineteenth century as a producer of knowledge. The challenge presented by the latter is to raise resources to fund research in areas that have have no public legitimacy for it.

problems detailed organizations are the institutional framework in which there were another kind of restructuring of the social sciences at the theoretical level. On the one hand, the relationship between researcher and research has been shifting from a point where the position of the researcher was acultural, apolitical and objective, to one where the researcher is contextualized, it is known from a social and cultural context that influence their observations, and a recognition that research activity as modified in reality something which is about, in this sense, the paradigm of objectivity of science is placed in between the and to that extent, the truth value of their findings.

Moreover, the reinsertion of time and space in social studies, but not as elements unchanged. The social sciences should aim to take these elements as cultural constructions that affect and, in turn, helps to interpret reality.

A third level is that of overcoming the separation supposedly objective interdisciplinary social science. In practice, the boundaries between disciplines are transferred by the challenges posed by the analysis of social reality.

According to the author, to overcome the current problems of the social sciences is necessary to "open" to virtually all scholars who have something to say on the subject and come from different geographical latitudes, social and academic. Furthermore, it also notes that several important dimensions that need to be discussed: the implications of rejecting the ontological distinction between humans and nature, the implications of refusing to consider the state as the only source of possible boundaries and / or primary within which social action occurs and must be analyzed, the implications of accepting the endless tension between the one and the many, the universal and particular, as a permanent feature of human society and not as an anachronism, and the kind of objectivity which is plausible in light of the assumptions presupposed by science.

Finally, Wallerstein argues that there are four kinds of structural processes that must be taken into account in the formation and management of production of knowledge areas: First, the expansion of institutions that bring together scholars from different fields working together. Second, the establishment of integrated research programs within university structures cutting through the traditional lines, with specific intellectual goals and funds for limited periods. Third, compulsory joint appointment of professors. And fourth, the attached work for graduate students, allowing them to function in other areas other than their specialty.

Comparing proposals

An important Wallerstein's approach with which we can start comparing with the proposal of Chakrabarty, is the subject of how to give the interdisciplinary social sciences and the corresponding debate on the validity of the distinctions between disciplines. Briefly

say that Wallerstein notes that the social sciences were built around three antinomies that are widely discussed: moderno-civilizado/no modern, past / present and nomothetic / ideographic. Based on the first antinomy, history and nomothetic social sciences (economics, politics and sociology) were charged to study the modern, civilized, while anthropology and Oriental studies studying the non-modern societies. On past and present, history is designated as a discipline for the study of past and nomothetic social sciences for the present. Finally, the distinction between nomothetic disciplines (social sciences) and ideographic (anthropology and Oriental studies) was performed on the basis that the first could pose laws or rules which elucidated the functioning of modern society, while the latter is in charge of describing the features of cultures or societies non-modern.

This distinction remained in force until mid-twentieth century when fueled interdisciplinary studies from the United States to produce reliable knowledge about different areas of the globe. This was a question about the division of social sciences was becoming as common sense that antinomies demarcating the borders between them, were invalid, it was perfectly possible to apply a discipline to an area that was traditionally the domain ( example, sociology in countries considered not modern).

However, it was not until after a time it reinforced the idea that there needed to interdisciplinary studies. This was created by the combination of two modern European concepts: Modernization and Development. Within interdisciplinary studies, emerged modernization theory, which sought to respond to the paradox of the disciplines applied in areas that were not within its competence. This theory proposed that all societies were in the process of upgrading, but not all were at the same stage, therefore, the way these people would reach the goal of Modernity (European), was a through "development." This tuco two consequences: One is from public policies, programs to encourage development, with the notion of "progress" back. Another organizational level with greater investment in social research to develop multidisciplinary social projects.

This position had detractors in the sixties by social scientists (to turn to the story) whose concern for social change led them to criticize the positions mainstream social science, calling it naive to highlight the "consensus "Social relations and arrogant to apply Western standards to study different cultures.

With all these ongoing developments, the increasingly blurred boundaries between disciplines and heterogeneity inside each one (due to the stretching of its objects of study) questioned the antinomies initially used to define the social sciences.

Chakrabarty is among the critics of social science to try to approach different situations with a theory developed for Europe in that line, says the author, the history of non-European countries are part of Europe, have this universal character and because researchers approach different situations with categories of modern European social sciences also declared universal.

At this point, make two touchdowns Chakrabarty quite interesting. The first concerns "inequality from ignorance", ie the need for Third World social scientists to learn European history and European indifference to the show on the history of third world countries. This has to do with the place of validation of social science categories. The influence of European modern scientific thought is such that the idea that only through science and modern European philosophy is possible to achieve a theoretical, abstract, true reality is predisposed to all social scientists (including Third world) to accept this premise as true.

The second refers to the route as the histories of Third World countries. As the analytical model is of European origin and European societies, the history of non-European countries always be seen through the eyes of modernity and in that sense, description and analysis of the stories are full Third truncated process, deficiencies, vision ucronia (see the past as a sum of missed opportunities, etc.). However, even when the social scientist predisposes their horizon and develop analytical tools to collect stories about the stories of subordinates, yet it is impossible for social science knowledge without the prism of European history as representations of the junior end up being a mimesis of modern forms of European subject, given that the social sciences are speaking from modern categories that can only see the social relations within the institutional framework of the nation state.

Are these two goals which lead the author to say that it is impossible to produce a full understanding of Third World countries since college, since she plays institutionally "vices" of modern European social theory.

From this, Chakrabarty poses two things. First, demystify Europe as the sole producer of theoretical knowledge, it should be noted the circumstances in which it was produced, ie the processes observed. On the other hand, to make visible that the attribution of "modern" to "the European" have ethnocentric character to validate the position of Europe as "illustrator" in the world, a position that has been endorsed by third world scientists. Second, Chakrabarty impels the reader to doubt the knowledge from the university and, in general, of all places "official." However, no proposed sites from which to obtain the knowledge, perhaps in a spirit of "open" the social sciences to multiple centers of production capacities are not attributed validate or not the knowledge produced in other places, this is not clear.

Rather, Wallerstein does have a much more definite about it. To this author, the emergence of non-teaching sites of knowledge production has been positive in both has led to an interdisciplinary development of social knowledge. However, Wallerstein does not rule out the university and organizational basis of scholarly research, however, says that while there is institutional flexibility for interdisciplinary contact, social knowledge production can be quite rewarding.

Comment

"Open the Social Sciences" and "provincializing Europe" are two very interesting proposals from which they can do some thinking.

undoubtedly is becoming more necessary to build bridges between different disciplines for the approach to reality. In fact, in countries like the Netherlands there are universities that combine ancient races that are not related as engineering and sociology, to produce graduates capable of using the tools of both races in the analysis of irrigation systems. This is just a sample of the growing need to diversify the social science methodology and scope vary their objects of study for adapt to the demands of the current situations.

However, a more abstract level, we should ask ourselves if only interdisciplinarity will allow a fuller understanding of reality. As Chakrabarty ago, we must also ask whether the epistemological foundations of social sciences allow the approach to the reality we want. The example of natural resources and water is typical. Social sciences for a long time served as tools for development projects, says Wallerstein talking about modernization theory, but put aside a crucial factor was the environment. Wallenstein himself in a text called The End of the World as we know it , realizes what material and discursive conditions that allowed the historical capitalism eventually produce a system that produces more and more goods and degrades the environment. This system, as Boaventura de Sousa Santos said, is based on a modern Western epistemology that gives you the power to the rational subject to take control over nature that is both resource and even hostile to humans [6] .

"provincialize Europe, for example, would also problematize the history of progress and development, showing its ambiguities and contradictions, and question the very foundations of capitalist production and irrational use of natural resources.

The question that remains to be answered is whether achieving this is possible from traditional institutions like the university. Perhaps rather than give an answer other questions should be formulated. A plant may be what is the role of social science? Does the fact that it is accepted that criticism or is influenced by cultural context, imply that we should forget the whole ideal of scientific objectivity and take a position of active involvement in society? Who should define this position? Should be from the university? Do you have the legitimacy to choose one or another trend?

One last thought about it, it should not be discarded in the university and organizational basis of academic, as it appears to do Chakrabarty, because before it would have to think about the trends that continue to this university and its academics. After all, Chakrabarty himself is speaking from a university of Chicago, in a country belonging to the First World, yet has managed to develop a speech in which he will reveal the pitfalls of "history" universal and modern European social sciences for the analysis of reality that it is geographically close and distant biographically.

In this sense, Wallerstein has a much broader vision about the possibilities for restructuring or, in his words, "open the social sciences" from different areas are new or traditional.



[1] Wallerstein, I . Open Social Sciences. See chap. 3: What kind of social science we must build now? , p. 80

[2] In Dube, Surabh (Coord.) Colonial Past. El Colegio de Mexico, Mexico DF, 1999. taken www.clacso.org / wwwclacso / English / html / books / postcolonialism / poscol.html

[3] The author uses los conceptos “Europa” e “India” como “términos hiperreales en cuanto a que se refieren a ciertas figuras de lo imaginario, cuyos referentes geográficos permanecen más o menos indeterminados [..] como si fueran categorías dadas, materializadas, términos opuestos que forman un binomio en una estructura de dominación y subordinación.” (p. 1).

[4] En el caso de la India , el autor se apoya en Sumit Sarkar to identify at least three national nature aspirations were not fulfilled: the Gandhian dream of a farmer who comes to who should be in Ram Rajya, the leftist ideals to achieve the social revolution and the unresolved problems of the bourgeois transformation and capitalist development.

[5] Chakrabarty quoted a poem by Michael Madhusudan Dutt which highlights the need to have passed through the British rule. And of course, is analyzed from a perspective where European values \u200b\u200bare established as the goal to achieve, his verses say greatly in this aim: because / everything that was good and lived / within us was made, shaped and animated / UK by the regime itself.

is quite evident the dichotomy between the good and Europe, which is maintained, while evil seems to be the non-European, which does not appear or should not, that is, the Indian.

is also interesting to note the similarity of this dichotomy with the debate about the nature and human culture. The important point is that usually attributed all the good and constructive culture or reason and the bad, instinctive and destructive nature of humans (their biological condition, say). If, naively, we could group pun almost as synonyms: nature (instinct) - premodern - Indian culture (reason) - Modern - Europe.

[6] Santos, Boaventura de Sousa . know from the South. For emancipatory political culture . See Cap. 4: The purpose of discovery Imperial . San Marcos, Lima, 2006.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

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" The problem of water or water problems? Space

In all human societies, access to water sources has been a constant concern, even more established civilizations in arid areas with large populations. Many of the leading companies in history - in terms of political influence, economic, social and cultural - hydraulics led to its limits in order to ensure control and water supply. In fact, some historians believe the great power that meant having control of water in agrarian societies, which could have been the basis of the concentration of power in the eastern empires [1] . In Andean societies, part of a maximum vertical control of ecological [2] control depended on water, particularly in agriculture by terraces.

During the Middle Ages , water management became crucial in the formation of new cities, the agricultural frontier expansion and diversification of energy sources. In the Renaissance, cities major European had as one of its distinctive features hydraulic systems to supply water to the population, with fountains and canals in various parts of the urban space [3] . In the tenth century, consolidating a process of agricultural expansion in Europe, which was based on the transformation of energy sources invested in agricultural production, one of the major energy changes was the use of hydropower due to widespread use of the waterwheel [4] . Perhaps

modernity have made the most ambitious water projects in history and have multiplied the uses of water as never seen before. Cities are implementing the water house, establishing industries that use the water in the production process (as a refrigerant, as an input or as a means of waste disposal), are built dams which transform kinetic energy of falling water electric power for cities, the population growth requires technify agriculture so that the water will become a key element for agricultural production, massive complexes are prepared hydraulic systems for industrial mining development, among other multiple uses of water.

As we see, water has always been a crucial factor in the development of different societies in different periods. The problem of water lines as we have said before, is focused around accessibility, collection, transportation, distribution and use, with these complex issues in themselves and a challenge for engineering. However, today we realize that the problem went beyond the material dimension, infrastructure and the satisfaction of human needs.

The water problem involves a number of variables between which have been integrated into the ecological, social relations and culture. These relatively new lines that make up water issues make visible the critical current resource availability and the crisis that could arise in the future on the basis of the shortcomings of today.

Then the water problem has new edges that compel us to look at the issue of water resources in a holistic manner. But what are those conditions that have caused so much concern about the water?

We start with a quick reading of the geography of the planet. If we look at the globe we will realize that there are areas with abundant vegetation, other extremely dry, a warm climate, some with rainy weather, flat terrain, steep terrain, etc. So we can say that the planet has an uneven natural distribution of water. At first glance, it is also possible to observe that although the water to three quarters of the planet's surface (roughly 71% of the surface), there are areas that completely lack the resource and are inhabited by human beings. In this case, the problem is the uneven natural distribution of water, but the process of human occupation of the territories. Despite this, the people settled in areas with scarce water developed ways to get it. This differentiation

between geographical areas with abundant water sources and arid, with populations that have developed ways to ensure sufficient water supply for their survival, add a crucial factor: the anthropogenic climate change [5] . According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) - an international team of studies on the consequences of climate change - one of the most characteristic and destructive effects of this phenomenon is an intensification of the climatic conditions in some areas of the planet [6] : rising temperatures in desert places, flooding more often in vulnerable areas, drought. Climate change is also favorable conditions for the melting of glaciers which are permanent freshwater reserves.

The contamination of water sources (rivers, groundwater, lakes and seas) resulting from mining activities (mining) and processing (industrial) water resources unusable for human consumption and, thus, destroy biodiversity accompanies it.

In addition, fresh water was always a scarce resource defined by its accessibility, today is availability, since there are fewer sources of where to get it. On the other hand, is not just about the loss of a material that is indispensable to us, we are talking about the biodiversity that exists there. If water is a lifeline that connects with our own ecosystems How relevant is treating it as a resource?



[1] Despite having been discussed by failing to integrate other dimensions beyond the hydraulic control (see: Wittfogel, 1966), these theories led to open a field of study are now exploited as studies on water related issues.

[2] View: Murra, John. economic and political formations in the Andes . View: Cap. 3. Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, 1975

[3] The Romans also marked by building fountains, public baths and water channels, as well as the construction of aqueducts for transporting water.

[4] View: Landes, David. Wealth and Poverty of Nations . Download: The invention of the invention , p. 77 to 95. Buenos Aires: Javier Vergara, 1999 and Oakley, Francis . The Medieval Experience . See: Chapter III. Making and Doing, The Nature of Economic Medieval Life, p. 94 to 102. Toronto: Toronto University Press, 1974

[5] This means "manmade."

[6] Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) - Working group II . Climate Change: 2007. Climate Change Impacts, adaptation and vulnerability . 2007