Resultados de búsqueda - Educational change Mexico.
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Poverty, inequality, and spillover in Mexico's education, health, and nutrition program
Publicado 2001Enlace del recurso
Artículo preliminar -
Poverty, inequality, and spillover in Mexico's education, health, and nutrition program
Publicado 2001Enlace del recurso
Informe técnico -
Global change: Impacts on water and food security
Publicado 2010“…To discuss these issues in-depth, the International Food Policy Research Institute, the Third World Centre for Water Management, Mexico, and the Tropical Agricultural Research and Higher Education Center (CATIE), Costa Rica, held a three-day International Conference on “Globalization and Trade: Implications for Water and Food Security,” at CATIE’s Turrialba, Costa Rica, headquarters under the auspices of the CGIAR Challenge Program on Water and Food in 2005. …”
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The impact of PROGRESA on women's status and intrahousehold relations: final report
Publicado 2000“…Exploring the assumptions that the central role played by women in PROGRESA has both benefits and unintended consequences; and that women’s and men’s attitudes and beliefs have implications for the success of the program, this study examines: women’s and men’s attitudes toward the role of women as PROGRESA beneficiaries; the perceived benefits to the household as well as increased tensions and time burdens; decisionmaking patterns; changes women describe with regard to freedom of movement, self-confidence, and ‘opening their minds;’ women’s and men’s attitudes toward the education of girls, adult education that women want for themselves in order to improve their lives, and education they want for men to help women put into practice what they learn through participation in the program.…”
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Artículo preliminar -
Reducing risk, strengthening resilience: Social protection and nutrition
Publicado 2016Enlace del recurso
Capítulo de libro -
Why do rural youth migrate? Evidence from Colombia and Guatemala
Publicado 2024“…Results show that unemployment, lack of educational opportunities, and insecurity are the main reasons for youth migration to cities or abroad, with Mexico, the United States, and Spain being the most common destinations. …”
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Journal Article -
Validation of the Global Diet Quality Score (GDQS) among children 10 to 14 years of age
Publicado 2025“…Regression models were conducted to evaluate the association between the change in 1 SD of each metric score and usual intake of nutrients, mean probability of nutrient adequacy, and biomarker and anthropometric outcomes adjusted by age, sex, socioeconomic status, educational level, urban/rural area, and usual energy intake (for dietary outcomes). …”
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Barriers and solutions to conducting large international, interdisciplinary research projects
Publicado 2019“…Global environmental problems such as climate change are not bounded by national borders or scientific disciplines, and therefore require international, interdisciplinary teamwork to develop understandings of their causes and solutions. …”
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Artículo -
Urbanization and the nutrition transition
Publicado 2000“…Obesity and its related diseases, for example, affect 25–50 percent of the population in countries as disparate as Kuwait, Mexico, Thailand, and Tunisia. This "nutrition transition"—a term used to describe shifts in diet, physical activity, health, and nutrition—can be traced to higher incomes, the influence of mass media and food marketing, and a range of changes in the nature of work and leisure....How can the food policy and public health communities, already burdened by the challenges of poverty, undernutrition, and underdevelopment, deal with the seemingly contradictory goal of promoting both greater and lesser food intake? …”
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Brief -
Access to crop digital information and the sharing of benefits derived from its use: background and perspectives
Publicado 2020“…During and following the Second World War, Norman Borlaug, the Green Revolution pioneer, was able to mobilize crop diversity to develop dwarf stature, disease resistance, and absence of seasonal cues to breed higher yielding wheats in Mexico (Borlaug, 2002, 2007; Swaminathan, 2009) while M.S. …”
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Journal Article