scholarly journals Preface to the April 2018 Issue including selected works from CIbSE 2017 and LACLO 2016

2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Héctor Cancela ◽  
Isabel Brito ◽  
Luca Cernuzzi ◽  
Marcela Genero ◽  
Jesús García Molina ◽  
...  

This issue of the CLEIej consists of three main parts: i) a review paper on the state of the art of how contextual information extracted from a user task can help to improve searches for contents relevant to this task; ii) extended and revised versions of Selected Papers (which correspond to the second and third best paper from each track) presented at the XX Ibero-American Conference on Software Engineering (CIbSE 2017), which took place in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in May 2017; and, iii) extended and revised versions of selected papers from LACLO 2016, the XI Latin American Conference on Learning Objects and Technology, which took place in San José, Costa Rica, in October 2016.

Author(s):  
Annette Calvo Shadid

Este artículo constituye una revisión crítica exhaustiva del estado de la técnica en la realización de los fonemas / r / y / r / en el español de Costa Rica . El artículo también describe la variación de estos fonemas sobre la base del análisis cuantitativo de una muestra, el habla de la primera generación educada de San José. La muestra forma parte de los datos recogidos para el Proyecto Coordinado sobre Variedad de Educación en las ciudades principales de Ibero América y la Península Ibérica.This article constitutes an exhaustive critical review of the state of the art on the realization of the phonemes / r / y / r / in Costa Rican Spanish. The article also describes variation of these phonemes on the basis of the quantitative analysis of a sample of female, first-generation educated speech from San José. The sample is part of the data gathered for the Coordinated Project on Educated Variety in the Main Cities of Ibero America and the Iberian Peninsula.


Acta Poética ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Nadal Palazón

Como respuesta a las escasas descripciones existentes sobre los titulares periodísticos —las cuales en algunos aspectos a menudo no superan la prueba empírica que supone cotejarlas con la realidad observable en los periódicos—, en este trabajo se propone un inventario actualizado de las particularidades formales más características de los titulares, de acuerdo con su distribución en un amplio corpus de prensa actual en español. El inventario se resume en cuatro rasgos constantes y cuatro variables. Los rasgos constantes, presentes de manera relativamente homogénea por todo el corpus (si bien algunas de sus variantes presentan ciertos condicionamientos), son los siguientes: bimembración expresiva, elipsis, estructuras nominales y presente histórico. Los rasgos variables, que muestran una distribución menos regular, son, en cambio, los siguientes: tercera persona impersonal, verbo inicial, potencial citativo y presencia de criptónimos. El análisis se basa en un corpus de 3 689 titulares recientes publicados en español en las ediciones impresas de los periódicos El País, de Madrid (España); La Opinión, de Los Ángeles (Estados Unidos); El Universal, de México (México); La Nación, de San José (Costa Rica); Hoy, de Santo Domingo (República Dominicana); El Tiempo, de Bogotá (Colombia); El Nacional, de Caracas (Venezuela); El Comercio, de Lima (Perú); El Mercurio, de Santiago (Chile), y Clarín, de Buenos Aires (Argentina). Cuando procede, se atiende el factor diatópico, y se demuestra la inexactitud de algunos planteamientos que suelen repetirse en la bibliografía especializada.


2013 ◽  
Vol 93 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Di Stefano

Abstract Beginning with the dissolution of colonial Christendom, the development of church property has been closely tied to processes of secularization in Latin American countries. This process is to be understood not as the marginalization of religion but as the restructuring of religious matters in modern societies. The practice of lay patronage—which was common in America, as it was in Europe for centuries—channeled family wealth into the financial support of certain institutions, which in turn allowed lay patrons to intervene in decisions about religious life. In the case of Buenos Aires such properties were absorbed or expropriated during the nineteenth century as part of a process of centralization, in which local church authorities, the papacy, and the state all participated. Thus in Buenos Aires the process of disentailment of church property did not involve the transfer of property from the church to the state, as might be supposed by extrapolating from the liberal reforms that took place in other countries. Rather, there was a process of appropriation by the state and by the church of property and managerial authority that had previously been held by families and various local institutions. It is worth asking if this phenomenon was unique to Buenos Aires, or if it can be generalized in some measure to other parts of the Hispanic world.


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