Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales <p style="text-align: justify;">La Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales es publicada por el Colegio de Sociología y Ciencias Sociales de Panamá, que es un organismo de carácter profesional, gremial y académico. Su objetivo es la promoción de la reflexión científico social sobre la realidad de Panamá, Centroamérica y el mundo del siglo XXI.</p> <p style="text-align: justify;"> </p> <p style="text-align: justify;"> </p> <p style="text-align: justify;">Categoría índice: Ciencias sociales</p> es-ES <p><a title="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/deed.es" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><img src="/public/site/images/uprevistas/cc_by_nc_sa.png"></a></p> <p>Este obra está bajo una&nbsp;<a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/" rel="license">licencia de Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0 Internacional</a>.</p> revistapdcsociales@gmail.com (Olmedo Beluche) luis.rodriguez@up.ac.pa (Luis A. Rodr´íguez F.) Mon, 10 Jun 2024 17:53:05 +0000 OJS 3.3.0.11 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss 60 Editorial https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5190 Olmedo Beluche Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5190 Mon, 10 Jun 2024 00:00:00 +0000 History of Mining in Veraguas https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5155 <p><em>This article emerges from the research called Evolution and Development of Architecture in the Province of </em><em>Veraguas, offering a theoretical and graphic work, which integrates the methodology of architectural research </em><em>and the existing historiographic information on buildings and cities in Veraguas. We organized the research </em><em>chronologically, detailing it with information on the first Spanish mining towns founded in Veraguas, of which </em><em>Santa María de Belén, La Concepción de Veragua, Santa Fe, Atalaya or San Miguel de Atalaya, Filipinas de </em><em>Soná, stand out. </em><em>Montijo, San Francisco de la Montaña, San Marcelo de La Mesa, Las Palmas, San Francisco </em><em>Javier de Cañazas (Minas Santa Rosa-San Isidro), La Ermita de Río de Jesús, Nueva Alcudia, in which we detail the creation of them and its evolution. </em><em>All the information has been the product of exhaustive research reviewing many bibliographic sources of the time. For many years, the Veraguas region has been a center of appreciation for its mineral riches, which have not only been known since the arrival of the Spanish, but also since pre-Hispanic times.</em></p> Sebastián Ariel Aguilar Medina Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5155 Mon, 10 Jun 2024 00:00:00 +0000 Extractivism https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5156 <p>Empowered with an area of 45,123 hectares, the Sierra del Sarnoso, rich in wild fauna and flora, as well as its geological variety and biodiversity, is considered, for its large marble deposits, as a source of wealth. The objective of this study is to describe the environmental impact of exterminating endemic flora and fauna in marble extractivism tasks. The above is based on article 46 of the Sustainable Environmental Management Law for the State of Durango, Mexico. Results: there is a discrepancy regarding environmental and economic values, as well as imminent duality to improve the quality of life, minimizing environmental damage. At the same time, the residents express marked anger towards government authorities, due to the limited opening of sources of employment and the pressing need for socio-economic support.</p> Martha Rincón Escobedo, Rubén Jáuregui Estrada, María Guadalupe Jáuregui Beovide, Laura Gabriela Cabrera García Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5156 Mon, 10 Jun 2024 00:00:00 +0000 Industrial extractivism, an unsustainable practice https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5157 <p><em>The industrial extractivism of materials (metallic and non-metallic such as water) in Panama has become part of environmental conflicts in the last 20 years that are exposed in contrast to the political discourses that propose exploration and extraction as a development model. to the detriment of the environments inhabited by biotic and abiotic elements, many of them endemic to our tropical humid forests; They violate their subsistence. This article is a proposal for citizen reflection and environmental governance, for our politicians who make decisions to grant multinationals the extraction of non-renewable resources, as if there were no tomorrow to protect for our future generations. It presents as firm data, the most recent map of environmental conflicts in Latin America from the Observatory of Mining Conflicts of Latin America, which includes Panama, for issues related to mineral extraction.</em></p> Lollalty Moreno de Cuvillier Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5157 Mon, 10 Jun 2024 00:00:00 +0000 The impacts generated by tourism in the Bay of Cienfuegos https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5158 <p><em>The relationships between tourism and the environment are varied. Low-impact tourism can effectively </em><em>contribute to improving relations between one and the other, making tourism development and </em><em>environmental protection complementary activities. Some of the main environmental conflicts in tourism have to do with water (the tourism industry is a large consumer of water), waste (uncontrolled, seriously affects), noise and landscape degradation (tourism is a large consumer of landscape). The general objective </em><em>of this work is to analyze the work of environmental education in the impacts caused by tourism in the </em><em>bay of Cienfuegos. For the development of the research, the qualitative approach has been used, relying</em> <em>on techniques such as document analysis and in-depth interviews. Among the results, an increase in turbidity in the waters of the bay and a certain apathy and disinterest in caring for the environment on </em><em>the part of the citizens can be seen. Environmental tourism is not only there so that the functions of </em><em>ecological buffer and natural reproductive can be fulfilled, but also to offer new lasting perspectives of responsible and sustainable development over time, for the enjoyment of all.</em></p> Dainelis Reina Gallego , César David Fuentes Rodríguez, Yisel Pérez Recarey Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5158 Mon, 10 Jun 2024 00:00:00 +0000 Social effects of the maritime and port environment of a container logistics center in Panama Abstract https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5162 <p><em>The objective of this research is to generate an impact on the Maritime and Port Environment with the Creation of a Container Logistics Center in Panama, which today is only provided in the Atlantic area </em><em>in the Port of Manzanillo International and take advantage of the movement of cargo containerized cargo </em><em>that has established itself as the most important item that transits through the Panama Canal, capturing </em><em>the movement of 24.5 percent of the total cargo tonnage. The research has a descriptive design and for </em><em>the collection of information it was applied through questions in the maritime and port environment, with answers</em> <em>that</em> <em>imply</em> <em>the</em> <em>knowledge</em> <em>that</em> <em>the</em> <em>respondent</em> <em>has</em> <em>regarding</em> <em>the</em> <em>logistics</em> <em>center</em> <em>in</em> <em>the</em> <em>Atlantic </em><em>and Pacific area. The results determine that with this implementation the government can concession areas to different national and foreign companies that exploit their products in Panamanian territory, and not only as is done in the Atlantic area, but this will also provide enormous support to mitigate the growing unemployment rate. In conclusion, my project is to cause a positive impact on the options that exist in Panama with the creation of a container logistics center and take advantage of the fact that in recent decades, our economy has prevailed and with the Expansion of the Panama Canal, the strong investments both foreign and national and its powerful logistics industry make maritime transport to Panama a safe investment option, for the creation of a container logistics center in the maritime and port environment. </em></p> Elías Agapito Camaño Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5162 Mon, 10 Jun 2024 00:00:00 +0000 Impact of neoliberal globalization of culture on university students of Sociocultural Management for Development https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5188 <p><em>The theory of neoliberalism as a process has a great reach at the social level with an impact on geopolitics, economics and the environment. Edges related to the field of Social Sciences, however when we talk about </em><em>its impact on culture, human beings being essentially cultural beings vulnerable to atrocious pseudo- </em><em>cultural canons that quickly penetrate the identity of nations. This research aims to analyze how neoliberal </em><em>globalization influences culture, from a sociological and anthropological approach, through the use of </em><em>historical-logical, inductive-deductive and causal descriptive methods, through content analysis techniques </em><em>and the survey to carry out a diagnosis on cultural consumption, taking as a sample a group of students </em><em>of Sociocultural Management for Development of the Carlos Rafael Rodríguez University, as a </em><em>complement in the praxis, which allowed measuring the real influence and perception that the respondents have about this process, from a sociocultural perspective. This made it possible to obtain both qualitative </em><em>and quantitative data that demonstrate the marked influence of the neoliberal globalization on the </em><em>patterns of cultural consumption of these young people.</em></p> José Manuel Pereira González Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5188 Mon, 10 Jun 2024 00:00:00 +0000 Book review: Iriria. https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5163 <p><em>We share a review of the book Iriria. </em><em>Una morada para la educación ambiental, by Costa Rican professor, </em><em>writer and environmentalist Cristian Marrero Solano. </em><em>It is a call to build an ethic that helps us redefine the relationship between cultures and ecosystems, as a symbiotic element for life as a whole. The cover, which is a creation of Raquel Mora Vega and Katherine Quesada Calderón, evokes the girl Iriria, who </em><em>is a creator and at the same time constitutes the materialization of the earth, the home for environmental education. Iriria contemplates a futuristic vision, perhaps a harbinger of what her creation could become. Reflecting on the need to overcome anthropocentrism, the false dichotomy between civilized (Western) and barbaric people. Rather, the destiny of the earth could be barbarism, caused by capitalist Western culture, </em><em>predator of Mother Earth, and exploiter of human beings.</em></p> <p><em>The book has 4 chapters:</em></p> <p><em>Chapter</em> <em>I.</em> <em>The</em> <em>walker's</em> <em>trail</em></p> <p><em>Chapter</em> <em>II.</em> <em>The</em> <em>emerging</em> <em>environmental</em> <em>ethics</em> <em>of</em> <em>inhabiting</em> <em>the</em> <em>earth</em></p> <p><em>Chapter III. The instrumentalized emergence of contempt, for the other and the other</em></p> <p><em>Chapter IV. Environmental education is not science and it is not a paradigm</em></p> Giovanni Beluche V. Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5163 Mon, 10 Jun 2024 00:00:00 +0000 Creationism in Vicente Huidobro https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5165 <p><em>The following article is about the generalities of the Creationism, including its origin, who were the poets who started it, the characteristics that represent it and identify as a poetic Hispanoamerican movement, its historical context, its principles and importance. This work will remain clear that there is not older exponent of the creationism that Vicente Huidobro, one of the greatest poets of Latin American. About this poet I will begin talking about his life and works, and also about the evidence of the creationism in all of them.</em></p> Lázara Lucía Cruz Bauta , Dunia María Reyes Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5165 Mon, 10 Jun 2024 00:00:00 +0000 Considerations and chronologies regarding the analysis of the Dule revolution of 1925. Heading towards the centenary of the revolution https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5166 <p><em>The main objective of the article is to describe the main actions carried out by the Panamanian state </em><em>during the beginning of the republic for the forced integration of indigenous peoples, particularly the Gunas of the Gunayala region (San Blas). Theoretical interpretations are also presented, divided into categories </em><em>such as autonomy, denial, and conquest to analyze and interpret the social movement called the Dule </em><em>Revolution of 1925. The research design is descriptive of a bibliographic and documentary nature, where the</em><em> events before, during and after with the data and with specific dates that occur. The Dule Revolution of 1925 is caused by situations, tensions directed by the national government starting in 1903, through institutions such as churches, education and national security (national police).</em></p> Artinelio Hernández Campos Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5166 Mon, 10 Jun 2024 00:00:00 +0000 Omegan (women) in the Dule rebellion of 1925 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5169 <p><em>Women have a historical legacy that little is known, in the case of the Gunadule women who, together with the men, were key players in the Guna Revolution of 1925, where the Gunadule rose up against the </em><em>internal colonialism that stained their dignity as a people. It was the women who suffered the most in the </em><em>Gunadule communities, since the Panamanian colonial police forced them to remove their clothing, to </em><em>dance in Western style, to be carnival queens, and the celebration of sacred puberty ceremonies for young girls was prohibited. and they were imprisoned if they did not comply with the orders of the colonial agents. Therefore, many stood up together with their husbands, children, and grandchildren to plan the revolts in </em><em>the communities.</em></p> Bernal Damián Castillo Díaz Copyright (c) 2024 Revista Panameña de Ciencias Sociales http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 https://revistas.up.ac.pa/index.php/rev_pma_ciencias_sociales/article/view/5169 Mon, 10 Jun 2024 00:00:00 +0000