Archives

  • Estudios lingüísticos norperuanos
    Vol. 51 No. 94 (2024)

    July to December 2024

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    Institutional authors: 0/12

    National authors: 8/12

    International authors: 4/12

    Contribution of women to the development of the Humanities and Social Sciences: 5/12

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    In 2021 we considered, with Professor Rita Eloranta Barrera Virhuez, the possibility of publishing a monographic issue on North Peruvian linguistic studies. We considered that there was ample space for descriptive and historical studies, but also theoretical-methodological and applied to the study of the disappeared languages ​​that were spoken in the region (Mochica, Tallán, Sechura, among others), the varieties of Quechua (some residual ) and the regional Castilians that present a great force of expansion at the national level, thanks to the socioeconomic dynamism of the north of the country. We also found it interesting to accept works on toponymy and anthroponymy.

  • Los ritos ganaderos amerindios cincuenta años después
    Vol. 51 No. 93 (2024)

    January to June 2024

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    Institutional authors: 0/13

    National authors: 4/13

    International authors: 9/13

    Contribution of women to the development of the Humanities and Social Sciences: 7/13

  • La Iglesia católica en el siglo XX latinoamericano
    Vol. 50 No. 92 (2023)

    Julio a diciembre de 2023

    Autores institucionales: 1/10

    Autores nacionales: 3/10

    Autores internacionales: 6/10

    Aporte de mujeres al desarrollo de las Humanidades y las Ciencias Sociales: 2/10

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    El siglo XX en América Latina ha sido testigo de una activa presencia social de la Iglesia católica, verificable en diversos aspectos. Las transformaciones regionales sociales, económicas y políticas, tanto como los hechos mundiales, en una época de creciente secularización del Estado y la sociedad, y un lento proceso de diversidad religiosa, trajo consigo no solo reacciones regionales sino globales dentro del catolicismo. Las nuevas directrices de ese catolicismo global, a través de la Doctrina Social de la Iglesia, las obras misioneras mundiales o la transferencia de conocimientos y experiencias pastorales de otras latitudes, fueron tan importantes como las propias tomas de conciencia del clero y feligresías locales ante las cambiantes realidades. El resultado fueron diversas prácticas sociales de una confesión que mantuvo y, en algunos países, amplió su presencia pública.

    Dossier coordinado por Fernando Armas Asín.

    Tabla de contenidos

    Presentación 

    • Experiencia social y misión en la Iglesia Católica de América Latina en el siglo XX (Fernando Armas Asín), pp. 9-28

    Dossier

    • Testimonios de la fe (María Fernanda Romero Mendoza), pp. 29-58
    • Retratos de la civilización (Valentina Castillo Quinto), pp. 59-102
    • Catolicismo heterodoxo y prensa católica en el Perú (Fernando Armas Asín), pp. 103-144
    • De la alianza clérigo-conservadora al paralelismo católico (Francesco Ferrari), pp. 145-172
    • Fernando Vives Solar SJ (Sergio Peralta Venegas), pp. 173-200
    • «Una colaboración panamericana» (Federico Requena), pp. 201-227
    • Teología de la liberación, activismo político católico y la izquierda en el Perú (Juan Miguel Espinoza Portocarrero), pp. 229-271

    Dossier

    • Las comunicaciones postales, inalámbricas y de radiodifusión en la guerra entre Colombia y el Perú (Roger Pita Pico), pp. 273-309

    Notas

    • El legado del historiador Eusebio Quiroz Paz-Soldán (1940-2023) (Mario Rommel Arce Espinoza), pp. 311-319
    • Música y sociedad en la Asunción colonial (Alejandro Vera), pp. 321-329
    • Preservando la historia y el arte (Germán Zecenarro Benavente), pp. 331-346

     

     

  • Water, conflict and climate change in the Andes
    Vol. 50 No. 91 (2023)

    It is surprising that the theme of water and hydrographic basins does not occupy a central place in research and training in Social Sciences, Humanities and Law in Peru. There are important interdisciplinary academic initiatives, by the way. But any review of the bibliographic production and the curricula of the ninety-five licensed universities in our country will show, by flagrant omission, that water and basins do not arouse the interest or concern of our university community. Naturally, we have a host of brilliant researchers, Peruvians and Peruvians, who have been dedicated to the interdisciplinary study of water for decades. But they are a minority, and despite their efforts, water has not become a thematic axis of the national academic or political agenda.

  • Making and using archives
    Vol. 49 No. 90 (2022)

    July to December 2022.

    Institutional authors: 0/12

    National authors: 0/12

    International authors: 11/12

    Contribution of women in development of Humanities and Social Sciences: 6/12

    Dossier coordinated by Caroline Cunill y Jesús Bohórquez.

  • carátula de Allpanchis 89

    Interdisciplinarity in Andean Studies
    Vol. 49 No. 89 (2022)

    January to June 2022

    Institutional authors: 1/11

    National authors: 2/11

    International authors: 7/11

    Contribution of women in development of Humanities and Social Sciences: 2/11

    As a reflection of the richness and complexity of Andean studies, the present issue of Allpanchis (No. 89, 2022-I) brings together different approaches to Andean history. In this way, readers can find useful the results offered by the archaeological, linguistic, philological, cultural and historiographical analyses, which are presented here. Thus, the archaeologist Nils Sulca analyzes in detail the urban contribution of the Wari (600 AD - 1000 AD), taking as a case study those settlements that reflect the structures and technologies of the imperial expansion of this culture.

  • The ecclesiastical agents in dispute
    Vol. 48 No. 88 (2021)

    July to December 2021

    Institutional authors: 0/10

    National authors: 2/10

    International authors: 8/10

    Contribution of women in development of Humanities and Social Sciences: 5/11

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  • Allpanchis 87

    Canon law in the viceregal period
    Vol. 48 No. 87 (2021)

    Januar to June 2021

    Institutional authors: 0/10.

    National authors: 1/10.

    International authors: 9/10.

    Contribution of women in development of Humanities and Social Sciences: 2/11

  • ALL086 (2020-II)

    Ecclesiastical Studies
    Vol. 47 No. 86 (2020)

    July to December 2020.

    Institutional authors: 0/7

    National authors: 4/7

    International authors: 3/7

    Contribution of women in development of Humanities and Social Sciences: 3/8

    Dossier on studies of the Peruvian Church in the republican and contemporary stage.

  • ALL085 (2020-I)

    Church and independence. Relations with the early Republic in Chile and Peru
    Vol. 47 No. 85 (2020)

    January to June 2020.

    Rejection rate: 14% (1 of 7).

    Institutional authors: 1/6

    National authors: 0/6

    International authors: 5/6

    Contribution of women in development of Humanities and Social Sciences: 2/7

    The dossier that is presented in the following pages, entitled «The Church and Independence in Latin America, particularly in the cases of Chile and Peru (Arequipa)», arose in a work meeting held at the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso in October 2018. Said session —colloquium— was the result of a previous agreement between the Ibero-American Studies Program (PEI*sur), of said university and the Center for Peruvian Studies (CEP) of the Catholic University of São Paulo, Arequipa, and therefore had the presence of academics from both houses. It is, of course, very pertinent and necessary to thank the efforts made by the then director of the CEP, colleague Fernando Valle Rondón, whose enthusiasm continues to give strength to new activities to be developed -so we hope- among our universities in contexts not only of greater institutional knowledge, but also in terms of supporting any initiative that grounds and makes more understandable the needs for greater economic, social and cultural integration between our societies

  • Tribute to Sabine MacCormack
    Vol. 46 No. 83/84 (2019)

    January to December 2019.

    Institutional authors: 1/12

    National authors: 2/12

    International authors: 9/12

    This issue of Allpanchis magazine is dedicated to Sabine MacCormack (Frankfurt, 1941 - South Bend, 2012), the brilliant historian of German origin who devoted her life to the study of the Andean world. His first academic years were devoted to the study of Latin, the Church Fathers, the European Middle Ages, and the classical culture of the Mediterranean. And it was with this intellectual training –so rare among Americanists– that she tackled the misnamed Peruvian “colonial studies”; a controversial name because it ignores that the American viceroyalties were "kingdoms" and not "colonies", from a legal, political, cultural and religious point of view.

  • Allpanchis 81/82

    Religion and society in the Chilean Andean space
    Vol. 45 No. 81/82 (2013)

    January to December 2013.

    This double issue, coordinated by Chilean historians Jorge Hidalgo and Olaya Sanfuentes, presents a broad set of contributions from academics from that country. With the title of "Religion and society in the Chilean Andean space", it presents articles on religious practices in doctrines such as Tarapacá or Belén; art and devotion on the La Plata route; articulations between the commercial circuits and the practices of piety; or the interaction between various actors in the world of faith in the southern part of the Peruvian viceroyalty.

  • Allpanchis 80

    Andean archeology: new actors and analysis
    Vol. 44 No. 80 (2012)

    July to December 2012.

    This issue of the magazine Allpanchis offers a set of articles on historical archeology focused not only on the pre-Hispanic world but also on colonial settlements such as the ancient city of San Miguel de Piura. Archaeological investigations are also presented on the islands of the Peruvian sea, on the life of slaves in the Nazca estates and an interesting study on the reconstruction of cacical dynasties in Cajamarca of the seventeenth century, revealing mechanisms of establishment, maintenance and consolidation of power in the microcosm of a village.

  • Allpanchis 79

    Spanish in the colonial Andes: texts, authors and discourses
    Vol. 44 No. 79 (2012)

    January to June 2012.

    This monographic issue is entitled "The Spanish in the Colonial Andes" and presents articles by Ofelia Huamanchumo, Wulf Oesterreicher, Eva Stoll, Carlos Garatea, Ulrike Kolbinger and Álvaro Ezcurra. His attention is particularly focused on three essential aspects of colonial linguistics: first, written texts as primary sources; second, the actors, who reveal the intention and functionality of the texts; and, thirdly, the study of discourse as an entity in which the relationships between speech acts and their results are revealed.

  • Allpanchis 77/78

    A Look at South American Art
    Vol. 43 No. 77/78 (2011)

    January to December 2011.

    The present is a double number basically dedicated to art in the Andean south, both from pre-Hispanic and colonial times. The latter expressed in murals, canvases and buildings, where the iconographic is analyzed from the approaches of cultural and social history, as well as anthropology. In this sense, the common denominator of the aforementioned studies is found in iconography and its connections with multifaceted factors, both social and cultural.

  • Allpanchis 76

    Profiles of a Regional History: the current narrative of Arequipa
    Vol. 42 No. 76 (2010)

    July to December 2010.

    Although it is an important part of the so-called southern Andean region, Arequipa had not been the subject of any monographic issue. In this sense, this edition of the magazine aims to bring us closer to the most recent historiographical works on the aforementioned region. Among the contributions we have a review of Arequipa historiography to the present day, illustration and fidelism in the 18th century, Arequipa mining in the early republican years, as well as a suggestive study on the limits of vertical control or archipelago system in the Andean world.

  • Allpanchis 75 (carátula)

    Around social actors: Between the Inca and the Conquest
    Vol. 41 No. 75 (2010)

    January to June 2010.

    From this issue, the historian Fernando Valle Rondón assumes both the edition and the direction of the magazine, the same one that happens to be co-published with the Universidad Católica San Pablo, in Arequipa. This issue is dedicated to the study of some social actors who starred in two decisive moments in Peruvian history: the expansion of the Tawantinsuyo and the Spanish conquest of the Andes. Thus the academic discussion around the protagonists of Andean history is broadened.

  • Allpanchis 73/74

    Forty Years Allpanchis
    Vol. 41 No. 73/74 (2009)

    January to December 2009.

    Commemorative double number of the forty years of the magazine Allpanchis that coincides with the almost fifty years of ecclesiastical work of the prelatures of Ayaviri, Sicuani and Juli. It offers a balance of the activity of the Catholic Church in the Altiplano in the last half century, the trajectory of one of the founders of the IPA and numerous articles related to evangelization, food, articulation spaces and literature in the Andean world. past and present.

  • Allpanchis 72

    Ethnicity in the Old Regime
    Vol. 40 No. 72 (2008)

    July to December 2008.

    This issue offers historical collaborations around ethnicity in the colonial period in Peru. The article by José Carlos de la Puente about the trips of ethnic authorities to Spain to request grants from the king on behalf of the community stands out, revealing negotiations, vicissitudes and unsuspected advantages on the part of these ethnic gentlemen. Likewise, articles are presented on the Cabildo de los Veinticuatro Electores del Cuzco in the late colonial period, some questions on the religion of black slaves and the indigenismo of González Prada and Luis E. Valcárcel.

  • Allpanchis 71

    Legal Culture in the New World
    Vol. 40 No. 71 (2008)

    January to June 2008.

    This monographic issue coordinated by José de la Puente Brunke offers a set of articles on legal culture in the New World: the conception of Indian justice, the functioning of the courts and the administration of justice, as well as the colonial dynamics of jails and prisons. All these contributions are related to true specialists on the subject, whose work has focused particularly on the southern region of the American continent such as Charcas, Río de la Plata and Peru.

  • Allpanchis 70

    Research and Pastoral Care in the Andean World
    Vol. 39 No. 70 (2007)

    July to December 2007.

    On the theme of popular devotion in the Andes, this issue offers valuable collaborations on the Indian religiosity of Lima in the 18th century, the brotherhoods of Indians in Santiago de Chile in the 17th century and an interesting study on the ritual of the Eucharistic sacrament in the Mochica language at the time of the colony, which was translated into Spanish for this edition. Includes an interview with Antonio Olave, master of popular Andean imagery.

  • Allpanchis 69

    Research and Pastoral Care in the Andean World
    Vol. 39 No. 69 (2007)

    January to June 2007.

    This issue presents a new director, the sociologist Alejandro Estenós Loayza, and a new editor, the historian Fernando Valle Rondón, who will start a new stage in the management of the magazine with various historical themes. This edition is entitled "Research and pastoral work in the Andean world" and has important contributions on the theme of missions in Peru in the 16th century, the Apostolic College of Arequipa and its missionary work in Puno in the 19th century and Christianization. of the Peruvian indigenous.

  • Allpanchis 68

    Identities of yesterday, today, forever?
    Vol. 38 No. 68 (2006)

    Julio a diciembre de 2006.

    Continuando con los cambios, este número presenta un nuevo diseño y renovada estructuración de sus secciones. El tema central está vinculado al recurso hídrico y aunque no se trata de una propuesta nueva en la medida que ya fue tocado en ediciones anteriores y la revista da cuenta ellos, la novedad se puede encontrar en el enfoque que se hace del tema, desde una perspectiva de la gestión, que busca sobre todo alternativas de futuro para los Andes.

  • Allpanchis 67

    History of water and its management
    Vol. 38 No. 67 (2006)

    January to June 2006.

    With this issue, Allpanchis magazine inaugurates a new presentation and offers a set of reflections that have as their central axis the search for identities in Latin America. In this sense, we find different readings that attempt to answer two fundamental questions: what identifies our subcontinent and what the world and the indigenous contingent contribute.

  • Allpanchis 66

    Read or not read
    Vol. 37 No. 66 (2005)

    July to December 2005.

    This issue is entitled To read or not to read and is related to books and reading in Peru. It includes a discussion related to the formation of reading habits, written culture and a reflection on the contributions generated by university editions in Peru. Through them, the members of the new editorial board present a vision of the magazine's itinerary and project the elements that will characterize it from now on.

  • Allpanchis 65

    Religions and Andean Space
    Vol. 37 No. 65 (2005)

    January to June 2005.

    From this delivery, the direction of the magazine passed into the hands of its former editorial coordinator, Félix Grández Moreno, although its content is a complement to the papers presented at the IX Congress of the Latin American Association for the study of religions carried out in the Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú in 2002. This particular issue has selected works about evangelical religions, which are widespread in some cities of Peru and at a fairly rapid pace.

  • Allpanchis 64

    Religions and Andean Space
    Vol. 36 No. 64 (2004)

    July to December 2004.

    This issue brings together some outstanding papers presented at the IX Congress of the Latin American Association for the Study of Religions, where researchers from all over the continent participated and which took place at the Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú in 2002. Specifically, related essays are gathered to the different religions and religious beliefs that have been studied or collected throughout the Andean region.

  • Allpanchis 63

    Decentralization, Social Policies and Participation
    Vol. 36 No. 63 (2004)

    January to June 2004.

    This issue addresses the issue of regionalization, after the end of the Fujimori government, which ended the last decentralization experience (1989-1992), and the beginning of a new reform of this type in 2002. The authors seek to contribute to understanding of the progress and problems that the Peruvian decentralization process has been going through in its first 18 months.

  • Allpanchis 61/62 Volumen II

    Memories of Pain and Signs of Hope (II)
    Vol. 35 No. 61/62-II (2003)

    January to December 2003.

    Continuing with the theme of violence and hope in our societies, he presents interesting works on the role of mental health workshops in the southern Andean region, domestic violence and child abuse, as well as the violence of religions. It includes an article on the mystique of the saint of the poor and the Spanish poets: San Juan de la Cruz, co-founder of the Order of the Discalced Carmelites with Santa Teresa de Jesús.

  • Allpanchis 61/61 volumen I

    Memories of Pain and Signs of Hope (I)
    Vol. 35 No. 61/62 (2003)

    January to December 2003.

    This is also a double monographic issue entitled "Memories of pain and signs of hope", which emerged as an alternative to the violence that some Latin American countries had suffered and continue to suffer. The first volume focuses mainly on the subject of human rights in Peru and Argentina. It also seeks to highlight the importance of reconciliation and the role of the Truth Commission in Peru.

  • Allpanchis 59/60, vol. 2 (carátula)

    Community Justice in the Andes (II)
    Vol. 34 No. 59/60-II (2002)

    January to December 2002.

    This second volume on community justice in the Andes continues to show all the diversity of these very different ways of understanding and reasoning about justice. Likewise, some articles make comparative use of issues such as justice of the peace, through which they seek to reveal the great variety and wealth that Andean community organizations intrinsically possess.

  • Allpanchis 59/60, vol. 1 (carátula)

    Community Justice in the Andes (I)
    Vol. 34 No. 59/60 (2002)

    January to December 2002.

    This is a double number about community justice in the Andes, which is a form of conflict resolution that works in parallel with the judiciary and is still practiced within communities, towns, hamlets and partialities of the coast, mountains and mountains. jungle. The first volume emphasizes exclusively on the theme of the peasant rondas as an Andean community form of conflict resolution.

  • Allpanchis 58

    Displaced by Violence
    Vol. 33 No. 58 (2001)

    July to December 2001.

    The years between 1980-1996 were years of bloody terrorist violence in Peru. One of the most dramatic consequences was the displacement of large population groups, which is the main theme of this issue. Through important articles, an attempt is made to understand the relationship between the Peruvian state and civil society, and more specifically, the peasant communities victims of this violence.

  • Allpanchis 57 (carátula)

    Gender: Diversity and Harmony
    Vol. 33 No. 57 (2001)

    January to June 2001.

    This issue focuses on gender issues, therefore a relatively new concept insofar as it not only includes the female issue. Likewise, it presents various perspectives on the subject, such as the anthropological perspective, the spiritual theological approach and reflections on experiences carried out from a gender perspective in the field of health, education and human rights.

  • Allpanchis 56

    Healthy, Sick and Saved?
    Vol. 32 No. 56 (2000)

    July to December 2000.

    Under the suggestive title "Healthy, sick and safe?", This issue addresses the delicate issue of health in the Peruvian highlands. Notable studies allow us to understand the past and the current health situation in the country, as well as the challenges and the necessary changes in this sector. Some of these studies are aimed at recording exclusion, inequality and the deterioration of health conditions in the poorest regions of Peru.

  • Allpanchis 55

    Educate in the New Century
    Vol. 32 No. 55 (2000)

    January to June 2000.

    This issue brings important articles on an always delicate subject in Peru: education. Under the title of “Educating in the new century”, the magazine invites us to reflect on the international context, based on some conclusions drawn from the World Education Forum held in the city of Dakar, Senegal, in April 2000. Likewise, It also addresses specific issues of our educational reality.

  • Allpanchis 54

    The South Also Persists
    Vol. 31 No. 54 (1999)

    July to December 1999.

    Between April 13 and 16, 1999, the Second South American Social Week was held under the slogan "Laying down new roots for a life in abundance" at the initiative of the Peruvian Episcopal Conference. In this sense, this issue of the magazine presents an important part of these reflections, whose main themes were education, human dignity, ethics, employment and rural development, and as a north, resuming the road of construction of a new society.

  • Allpanchis 53

    Puno Our Land
    Vol. 31 No. 53 (1999)

    January to June 1999.

    This issue is dedicated to the department of Puno on the 100th anniversary of the birth of one of its most beloved children: Dr. Emilio Romero Padilla. Through important collaborations, the magazine seeks to get closer to the current reality of the economy, land and education in this department. Topics that were of deep concern to the intellectual from Puno, developed in his monograph on the department of Puno in 1928.

  • Allpanchis 52

    The Reverse of Modernity
    Vol. 30 No. 52 (1998)

    July to December 1998.

    Exclusion and social prejudice that contributes to the separation between “us” and “them” are once again the subject of an issue of Allpanchis magazine. This time the works are set in Latin America and the last decades of the 19th century and the first decades of the 20th as historical moment. The protagonists are always those marginalized, excluded and forgotten characters, the reverse of modernity, that is, prostitutes, criminals, the sick, addicts and immigrants.

  • Allpanchis 51

    The Wave of Communications
    Vol. 29 No. 51 (1998)

    January to June 1998 (by mistake it was printed with the year 1997).

    Studies on the impact of the mass media on modern society are still scarce, perhaps because it is a recent issue, whose origins date back to the time when radio, film and especially television reached levels. of massification and audience never imagined. For this reason, this issue seeks to contribute to the dissemination of knowledge about the influence of the media in today's society.

  • Allpanchis 50 (carátula)

    Ritual Symbols and Identities
    Vol. 29 No. 50 (1997)

    July to December 1997.

    This commemorative issue celebrates the permanence of the magazine for almost three decades without interruption. The fiftieth edition offers one of its most characteristic themes: Andean symbols, rituals and identities. This time it is about half a dozen articles that address this well-known topic, but from different approaches and academic disciplines such as anthropology, history, theology, linguistics and literary criticism.

  • Allpanchis 49

    After the Incas and Aztecs
    Vol. 29 No. 49 (1997)

    January to June 1997.

    It has often been said that Mexico and Peru are two countries united by history and that they have great cultural and social similarities. In that sense, the main theme of this issue seeks to compare the historical, political and cultural processes followed by Peru and Mexico after the Spanish conquest, as well as to analyze the paths followed by both countries in order, in this way, to check how much truth there is. in those similarities.

  • Allpanchis 48

    Included and Excluded
    Vol. 28 No. 48 (1996)

    July to December 1996.

    With the theme of included and excluded, this issue of the magazine presents a set of collaborations that try to open a bridge for dialogue and debate from the Andean region, conceptually introducing this dichotomy and denouncing various forms of exclusion as well as the need to promote inclusion economic, social, political and cultural that affects broad sectors of the population.

  • Allpanchis 47

    Andean Cities
    Vol. 28 No. 47 (1996)

    January to June 1996.

    From citizenship, this issue turns to the theme of Andean cities, inspired by the recent United Nations Conference on human settlements, called Habitat II. The articles deal with the role that cities play in the process of formation of regional economic and political spaces and the difficulties that limit the possibilities of complementarity and rural development.

  • Allpanchis 46

    Andean Citizenship and Communities
    Vol. 27 No. 46 (1995)

    July to December 1995.

    This issue brings us a set of collaborations related to the problem of citizenship in Andean populations and communities. Although it is a long-standing issue in the Andes, in recent years it has been gaining renewed attention and interest in the different academic circles, not only with respect to the meanings of citizenship, but especially in the way populations exercise Andinas their condition as citizens.

  • Allpanchis 45 (carátula)

    Between two oceans
    Vol. 27 No. 45 (1995)

    January to June 1995.

    Supraregional integration is present in this issue entitled "Between two Oceans and in it", a set of contributions is compiled on the problem of economic ties between Peru and Brazil. The articles point, firstly, towards independent and poorly communicated approaches and, secondly, to evaluate the great possibilities for the future of Peru, the southern region and the regional elites.

  • Allpanchis 43/44, vol. 2 (carátula)

    The Future of the Andes (II)
    Vol. 26 No. 43/44-II (1994)

    January to December 1994.

    This second part is mainly dedicated to highlighting the role of the protagonists of change, belonging to the elite or popular classes, as well as the role of peasant leaders and social movements. Next, around the work of the magazine, the opinions of a group of researchers, specialists and pastoral agents are also presented, through which they seek to examine the future of the Peruvian Andes.

  • Allpanchis 43/44, vol. 1 (carátula)

    The Future of the Andes (I)
    Vol. 26 No. 43/44 (1994)

    January to December 1994.

    Allpanchis magazine's 25 years of committed cultural work were reflected in this special two-volume edition that addresses the future of the Andes. The first volume brings together studies, experiences and reflections on this transcendental theme, whose main goal is the generation of national development proposals, taking into account the Peruvian highlands as a central character.

  • Allpanchis 42

    The Educational Challenge
    Vol. 25 No. 42 (1993)

    July to December 1993.

    The issue of education in Peru for many decades has been seen as a problem and also as a possibility, as it is considered one of the main access routes to modernization. The present issue of Allpanchis aims to contribute to reflection on this delicate subject, taking into account the concerns of the people, establishing various analyzes and developing educational proposals.

  • ALL041

    The New Children of the Sun
    Vol. 25 No. 41 (1993)

    January to June 1993.

    Young people are also present in the academic debate raised by the magazine. In this issue, entitled the new children of the Sun, we find numerous works that together offer us the possibility of approaching youth subjectivity at a crucial moment in Peruvian history at the end of the century. In this sense, the volume begins with a debate on the memories, forgetfulness and misunderstandings related to the subjectivity of young Andeans.

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