Elites in Latin AmericaSeymour Martin Lipset, Aldo E. Solari Oxford University Press, 1967 - 531 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 61
Página 74
... established order , this should not be interpreted as increased conserva- tism : the middle classes came to be identified with the institutions they had themselves helped to create , and through these , with what re- mained of the ...
... established order , this should not be interpreted as increased conserva- tism : the middle classes came to be identified with the institutions they had themselves helped to create , and through these , with what re- mained of the ...
Página 314
... established order in the long run . As the conflicts took on this extreme course the frightened landlords initiated what became a mass exodus away from the struggles . They abandoned their lands and their centers of power . By these ...
... established order in the long run . As the conflicts took on this extreme course the frightened landlords initiated what became a mass exodus away from the struggles . They abandoned their lands and their centers of power . By these ...
Página 402
... established between the public and private universi- ties is , in the best of cases , tense , due to the superior legal and financial position the state universities have compared to the private ones . Hence we cannot strictly speak of ...
... established between the public and private universi- ties is , in the best of cases , tense , due to the superior legal and financial position the state universities have compared to the private ones . Hence we cannot strictly speak of ...
Contenido
Values Education and Entrepreneurship | 3 |
The Middle Classes | 61 |
The Industrial Elite | 94 |
Derechos de autor | |
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