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Menchina Ayuso, coordinadora de la Muestra de Teatro Independiente del IES Andrés Laguna y Sergio Mínguez, profesor del grupo de teatro IES Andrés Laguna, nos hablan de la nueva edición de la Muestra de Teatro Independiente.
Carlos García de la Cruz, secretario de la Hermandad de Nuestra Señora la Virgen del Rosario, nos habla de la festividad de San Antón en Valsaín.
En este nuevo episodio de Encuentro, nuestro country head en BlackRock México, Sergio Méndez, platica con Verónica Pérez. Verónica Pérez es Presidenta de la Región Norte de América Latina para Dow desde mayo de 2021, una compañía de ciencias de materiales que es de las mayores empresas químicas en el mundo con una presencia en más de 160 países. Hablamos con ella sobre su interés desde pequeña en la química y la ingeniería, sobre los retos y oportunidades que enfrenta la industria de materiales en este momento durante la economía de transición, y su responsabilidad en las metas ESG a nivel compañía y sociedad.
Después de un miércoles con récord de audiencia en YouTube, hoy jueves no sólo hemos mejorado ese dato, sino que lo hemos doblado. Algo tan increíble como digno de estudio. ¿Por qué estamos creciendo tanto en audiencia en YouTube? Queda saber el motivo, pero si algo tenemos claro es que esto significa un premio a nuestro trabajo. Un trabajo que hoy jueves se había materializado durante dos horas de auténtico lujo, y eso que nos ha faltado tiempo, esto no es ninguna novedad, para secciones como los deportes o los titulares destacados, por no hablar de alguno de eso reportaje que duermen el sueño de los justos en la carpeta de la nevera. En cualquier caso, sí hemos disfrutado de una presentación/resumen de lujo, y unos invitados, en el estudio y por teléfono, que han ofrecido mucho juego durante los 120 minutos. Empezando por el representante del Club de Leones Humberto Normey, contándonos la ingente actividad de este gran colectivo para con los damnificados de la DANA, y la posibilidad de conectar en directo con Sergio Garay que, desde el epicentro de la catástrofe en Alfafar, nos ha ofrecido un diagnóstico de estas dos terroríficas semanas. De inmediato y cambiando de tercio, hemos conectado con José Manuel García, CEO de Smart Top Services. Nos ha servido en bandeja de la situación que viven los trabajadores con alguna discapacidad en nuestro país y la labor de su empresa para que este sea un estigma que se vaya superando a la velocidad de la luz. Su empresa, con implantación ya en toda España, es una de las más responsables de esta gran noticia. Sus premios, ya en su tercera edición, así lo confirman. Dos colaboradores. Una nueva en esta área y un veterano, han ayudado y mucho a que la segunda hora fuera tan completa como la primera, encontrando incluso hueco para trasladar una editorial en la que, una vez más se pone de manifiesto la nefasta política del señor que mantenemos como presidente del Gobierno, en este caso con el capítulo de impuestos, 81 más desde que Gobierna. Piedad Rodríguez ha estrenado “La Casa de tus Sueños” como presidenta de INMOBECO y contándonos los objetivos de este colectivos de inmobiliarias de Benidorm y comarca, y finalizando con Matías Romá y su sección “Ciudad, Noche y Día”, en esta ocasión con un capítulo muy especial: la ingente labor desarrollada por un colectivo de voluntarios de FCC Medio Ambiente de Benidorm desplazados durante muchas jornadas en Guadasuar y Algemesí, ayudando en todo lo que se les ha necesitado para con los vecinos afectados por la DANA en esas localidades.
En este nuevo episodio de Encuentro, el pódcast de BlackRock México, Sergio Méndez, Country Head para México, platica con Paqui Casanueva. Paqui es Vicepresidente Ejecutivo de INTERprotección, el bróker de seguros más grande de América Latina. Además de ser líderes en soluciones integrales en seguros y fianzas, a través de Inter.mx buscan innovar tecnológicamente en el mercado de seguros personales para autos, mascotas y de gastos médicos mayores. Platicamos con Paqui sobre el frente unido que deben de formar la inversión y el seguro para afrontar el futuro y el riesgo, y como el mercado de los seguros es un componente esencial para el funcionamiento de la economía mexicana. Paqui también es Presidente del Consejo Directivo de Endeavor, una comunidad de emprendimiento que conecta mentores con emprendedores e inversionistas, por lo que nos platicó sobre el ADN emprendedor mexicano y cómo exponenciar su alcance.
En este episodio, conversamos con Sergio Méndez, embajador CNCF, quien nos sumerge en el mundo del Food Tech. Nos cuenta cómo utilizar sensores IoT y cámaras térmicas para optimizar la elaboración de salsa picante, integrando tecnologías y servicios de AWS IoT. Descubre cómo la innovación está mejorando los procesos de producción alimentaria.Este es el episodio 13 de la temporada 5 del Podcast de Charlas Técnicas de AWS.Tabla de Contenidos:00:52 Conociendo a Sergio Méndez, embajador CNCF05:57 La vida como profesor en la universidad08:47 Proyectos de IoT11:11 Limpieza de los Océanos14:18 Detección Terremotos16:21 Deforestación en el Amazonas17:25 AWS Snowball y Outpost17:58 Food Tech, Salsa Picante20:40 Proceso de elaboración22:19 Sensores y dispositivos IoT para el proceso28:57 Procesos de Agricultura30:20 Volviendo a nuestra solución de salsa picante, cámaras Termales y etiquetado con IA33:00 Servicios AWS IoT Core, Greengrass, TimeSeries, Twinmaker,33:47 Arquitecturas Graviton y Spot35:52 Protocolos de Comunicaciones, MQTT, COAP, AMQP,37:10 Ejemplo domotizando Centro de Excelencia38:22 Sonar eliminador de Mosquitos42:15 Recomendaciones finalesRedes Sociales del Invitado:LinkedIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sergioarmgpl/X: @sergioarmgplPágina Web: sergiops.xyz Links mencionados en este episodio:Distribuciones Kubernetes:K3s, https://k3s.io/K3os, https://k3os.io/K3sup, https://github.com/alexellis/k3supOtros temas:Libro Edge Computing Systems with Kubernetes, Sergio Méndez.RaspberryShake, https://stationview.raspberryshake.org/Cesar Jung-Harada, https://www.linkedin.com/in/cesarharadaImpresoras 3D e IA Generativa:✉️ Si quieren escribirnos pueden hacerlo a este correo: podcast-aws-espanol@amazon.comPodes encontrar el podcast en este link: https://aws-espanol.buzzsprout.com/O en tu plataforma de podcast favoritaMás información y tutoriales en el canal de youtube de Charlas Técnicas☆☆ NUESTRAS REDES SOCIALES ☆☆
En este nuevo episodio de Encuentro, Sergio Méndez, Country Head de BlackRock México, entrevista a Diego Prieto, rector de la Escuela Bancaria y Comercial (EBC) desde enero de 2024. Hablamos sobre la historia y filosofía educativa de la EBC, así como la importancia de contribuir a la movilidad social, un pilar esencial para la universidad. Platicamos también de los retos de las instituciones educativas frente a las nuevas transformaciones digitales y tecnológicas, el cambiante rol de las y los profesores, y la definición del verdadero éxito en la educación universitaria.
Sergio Mínguez, director de teatro, nos habla de la obra "Los habitantes de la Casa Deshabitada".
Sergio Mínguez, director de teatro y Chema Peña, actor, nos hablan del estreno del estreno de la obra "Los habitantes de la casa deshabitada".
En este episodio de Encuentro estaremos haciendo una colaboración especial con The Bid, el podcast de inversiones de BlackRock en inglés, con una conversación entre Óscar Pulido, head global de estrategia de producto y conductor de The Bid, y Sergio Méndez, Country head para BlackRock México.Hablamos sobre las tendencias de inversión en los mercados de América Latina, y las fuerzas que hacen a la región un epicentro de los cambios globales en cuanto a infraestructura y tecnología. Este episodio, además de publicarse como parte de Encuentro, lo podrás encontrar en el feed de The Bid, ahora también disponible en español a través de México y América Latina, solamente en Apple Podcasts.
“Wisconsin has always been my home. It's not a place, however, where I've always felt at home,” (ix) declares Dr. Sergio M. González in the first two lines of his acknowledgments for his recently published book Strangers No Longer: Latino Belonging & Faith in Twentieth-Century Wisconsin (University of Illinois Press, 2024). These two sentences are the essence of the manuscript as González guides the reader through a one-hundred-year history of Latino migration, settlement, and religious life in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and surrounding rural regions. Many different nationalities that fall under the banner of the “Latino” identity have made home, work, and life in Wisconsin, but their presence was met with varying scales of hospitality – the act of welcoming “the stranger.” He writes in the Introduction, “Strangers No Longer demonstrates that relationships within hospitality interactions are in fact relations of power” (3). It is through a framework of hospitality that González structures his manuscript to show how clergy and laity accepted, to varying degrees, newly arrived Latinos in Wisconsin. Wisconsin religious institutions have a long engagement with Latino populations. From the arrival of Mexican immigrant laborers in the 1920s who were recruited as strikebreakers, to post-war Tejano and Puerto Rican migrants who were encouraged to assimilate into eurocentric ideals of belonging, and finally to the 1980s Sanctuary Movement in which Central American asylees sought protection from state and federal immigration enforcement, each of these topics and more are covered in Strangers No Longer. González skillfully crafts a narrative where the reader witnesses the development of the relationship between Wisconsin religious institutions and various Latino communities as one moving from a relationship of paternalism in the early 20th century to one of self-determination by the late 20th century. “Wisconsin Latinos pushed churches to acknowledge that they were no longer guests in their communities, or, in the words of the organizers of a statewide conference held in Appleton in 1974, ‘strangers in our homeland'” (141). By the 21st century, González asserts, the church had become a site for Latino political consciousness and resistance for decades. González's methodological rigor, clear writing, and strong theoretical grounding allow the reader to understand the delicate political, racial, economic, and spiritual power relations at play for Latinos in the Midwest during the 20th century. Strangers No Longer is a valuable read for undergraduate courses in Latino history, religious history, and social movement history. Alongside his academic work, González is building out his public history projects that offer primers on the sanctuary movement, immigration history, and Latino religious life in the Midwest. Links to Dr. Gonzalez's publications and projects: Strangers No Longer Mexicans in Wisconsin Wisconsin Latinx History Collective PBS Wisconsin's The Look Back Wisconsin Historical Society's upcoming History Center Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/latino-studies
“Wisconsin has always been my home. It's not a place, however, where I've always felt at home,” (ix) declares Dr. Sergio M. González in the first two lines of his acknowledgments for his recently published book Strangers No Longer: Latino Belonging & Faith in Twentieth-Century Wisconsin (University of Illinois Press, 2024). These two sentences are the essence of the manuscript as González guides the reader through a one-hundred-year history of Latino migration, settlement, and religious life in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and surrounding rural regions. Many different nationalities that fall under the banner of the “Latino” identity have made home, work, and life in Wisconsin, but their presence was met with varying scales of hospitality – the act of welcoming “the stranger.” He writes in the Introduction, “Strangers No Longer demonstrates that relationships within hospitality interactions are in fact relations of power” (3). It is through a framework of hospitality that González structures his manuscript to show how clergy and laity accepted, to varying degrees, newly arrived Latinos in Wisconsin. Wisconsin religious institutions have a long engagement with Latino populations. From the arrival of Mexican immigrant laborers in the 1920s who were recruited as strikebreakers, to post-war Tejano and Puerto Rican migrants who were encouraged to assimilate into eurocentric ideals of belonging, and finally to the 1980s Sanctuary Movement in which Central American asylees sought protection from state and federal immigration enforcement, each of these topics and more are covered in Strangers No Longer. González skillfully crafts a narrative where the reader witnesses the development of the relationship between Wisconsin religious institutions and various Latino communities as one moving from a relationship of paternalism in the early 20th century to one of self-determination by the late 20th century. “Wisconsin Latinos pushed churches to acknowledge that they were no longer guests in their communities, or, in the words of the organizers of a statewide conference held in Appleton in 1974, ‘strangers in our homeland'” (141). By the 21st century, González asserts, the church had become a site for Latino political consciousness and resistance for decades. González's methodological rigor, clear writing, and strong theoretical grounding allow the reader to understand the delicate political, racial, economic, and spiritual power relations at play for Latinos in the Midwest during the 20th century. Strangers No Longer is a valuable read for undergraduate courses in Latino history, religious history, and social movement history. Alongside his academic work, González is building out his public history projects that offer primers on the sanctuary movement, immigration history, and Latino religious life in the Midwest. Links to Dr. Gonzalez's publications and projects: Strangers No Longer Mexicans in Wisconsin Wisconsin Latinx History Collective PBS Wisconsin's The Look Back Wisconsin Historical Society's upcoming History Center Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
“Wisconsin has always been my home. It's not a place, however, where I've always felt at home,” (ix) declares Dr. Sergio M. González in the first two lines of his acknowledgments for his recently published book Strangers No Longer: Latino Belonging & Faith in Twentieth-Century Wisconsin (University of Illinois Press, 2024). These two sentences are the essence of the manuscript as González guides the reader through a one-hundred-year history of Latino migration, settlement, and religious life in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and surrounding rural regions. Many different nationalities that fall under the banner of the “Latino” identity have made home, work, and life in Wisconsin, but their presence was met with varying scales of hospitality – the act of welcoming “the stranger.” He writes in the Introduction, “Strangers No Longer demonstrates that relationships within hospitality interactions are in fact relations of power” (3). It is through a framework of hospitality that González structures his manuscript to show how clergy and laity accepted, to varying degrees, newly arrived Latinos in Wisconsin. Wisconsin religious institutions have a long engagement with Latino populations. From the arrival of Mexican immigrant laborers in the 1920s who were recruited as strikebreakers, to post-war Tejano and Puerto Rican migrants who were encouraged to assimilate into eurocentric ideals of belonging, and finally to the 1980s Sanctuary Movement in which Central American asylees sought protection from state and federal immigration enforcement, each of these topics and more are covered in Strangers No Longer. González skillfully crafts a narrative where the reader witnesses the development of the relationship between Wisconsin religious institutions and various Latino communities as one moving from a relationship of paternalism in the early 20th century to one of self-determination by the late 20th century. “Wisconsin Latinos pushed churches to acknowledge that they were no longer guests in their communities, or, in the words of the organizers of a statewide conference held in Appleton in 1974, ‘strangers in our homeland'” (141). By the 21st century, González asserts, the church had become a site for Latino political consciousness and resistance for decades. González's methodological rigor, clear writing, and strong theoretical grounding allow the reader to understand the delicate political, racial, economic, and spiritual power relations at play for Latinos in the Midwest during the 20th century. Strangers No Longer is a valuable read for undergraduate courses in Latino history, religious history, and social movement history. Alongside his academic work, González is building out his public history projects that offer primers on the sanctuary movement, immigration history, and Latino religious life in the Midwest. Links to Dr. Gonzalez's publications and projects: Strangers No Longer Mexicans in Wisconsin Wisconsin Latinx History Collective PBS Wisconsin's The Look Back Wisconsin Historical Society's upcoming History Center Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
“Wisconsin has always been my home. It's not a place, however, where I've always felt at home,” (ix) declares Dr. Sergio M. González in the first two lines of his acknowledgments for his recently published book Strangers No Longer: Latino Belonging & Faith in Twentieth-Century Wisconsin (University of Illinois Press, 2024). These two sentences are the essence of the manuscript as González guides the reader through a one-hundred-year history of Latino migration, settlement, and religious life in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and surrounding rural regions. Many different nationalities that fall under the banner of the “Latino” identity have made home, work, and life in Wisconsin, but their presence was met with varying scales of hospitality – the act of welcoming “the stranger.” He writes in the Introduction, “Strangers No Longer demonstrates that relationships within hospitality interactions are in fact relations of power” (3). It is through a framework of hospitality that González structures his manuscript to show how clergy and laity accepted, to varying degrees, newly arrived Latinos in Wisconsin. Wisconsin religious institutions have a long engagement with Latino populations. From the arrival of Mexican immigrant laborers in the 1920s who were recruited as strikebreakers, to post-war Tejano and Puerto Rican migrants who were encouraged to assimilate into eurocentric ideals of belonging, and finally to the 1980s Sanctuary Movement in which Central American asylees sought protection from state and federal immigration enforcement, each of these topics and more are covered in Strangers No Longer. González skillfully crafts a narrative where the reader witnesses the development of the relationship between Wisconsin religious institutions and various Latino communities as one moving from a relationship of paternalism in the early 20th century to one of self-determination by the late 20th century. “Wisconsin Latinos pushed churches to acknowledge that they were no longer guests in their communities, or, in the words of the organizers of a statewide conference held in Appleton in 1974, ‘strangers in our homeland'” (141). By the 21st century, González asserts, the church had become a site for Latino political consciousness and resistance for decades. González's methodological rigor, clear writing, and strong theoretical grounding allow the reader to understand the delicate political, racial, economic, and spiritual power relations at play for Latinos in the Midwest during the 20th century. Strangers No Longer is a valuable read for undergraduate courses in Latino history, religious history, and social movement history. Alongside his academic work, González is building out his public history projects that offer primers on the sanctuary movement, immigration history, and Latino religious life in the Midwest. Links to Dr. Gonzalez's publications and projects: Strangers No Longer Mexicans in Wisconsin Wisconsin Latinx History Collective PBS Wisconsin's The Look Back Wisconsin Historical Society's upcoming History Center Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology
“Wisconsin has always been my home. It's not a place, however, where I've always felt at home,” (ix) declares Dr. Sergio M. González in the first two lines of his acknowledgments for his recently published book Strangers No Longer: Latino Belonging & Faith in Twentieth-Century Wisconsin (University of Illinois Press, 2024). These two sentences are the essence of the manuscript as González guides the reader through a one-hundred-year history of Latino migration, settlement, and religious life in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and surrounding rural regions. Many different nationalities that fall under the banner of the “Latino” identity have made home, work, and life in Wisconsin, but their presence was met with varying scales of hospitality – the act of welcoming “the stranger.” He writes in the Introduction, “Strangers No Longer demonstrates that relationships within hospitality interactions are in fact relations of power” (3). It is through a framework of hospitality that González structures his manuscript to show how clergy and laity accepted, to varying degrees, newly arrived Latinos in Wisconsin. Wisconsin religious institutions have a long engagement with Latino populations. From the arrival of Mexican immigrant laborers in the 1920s who were recruited as strikebreakers, to post-war Tejano and Puerto Rican migrants who were encouraged to assimilate into eurocentric ideals of belonging, and finally to the 1980s Sanctuary Movement in which Central American asylees sought protection from state and federal immigration enforcement, each of these topics and more are covered in Strangers No Longer. González skillfully crafts a narrative where the reader witnesses the development of the relationship between Wisconsin religious institutions and various Latino communities as one moving from a relationship of paternalism in the early 20th century to one of self-determination by the late 20th century. “Wisconsin Latinos pushed churches to acknowledge that they were no longer guests in their communities, or, in the words of the organizers of a statewide conference held in Appleton in 1974, ‘strangers in our homeland'” (141). By the 21st century, González asserts, the church had become a site for Latino political consciousness and resistance for decades. González's methodological rigor, clear writing, and strong theoretical grounding allow the reader to understand the delicate political, racial, economic, and spiritual power relations at play for Latinos in the Midwest during the 20th century. Strangers No Longer is a valuable read for undergraduate courses in Latino history, religious history, and social movement history. Alongside his academic work, González is building out his public history projects that offer primers on the sanctuary movement, immigration history, and Latino religious life in the Midwest. Links to Dr. Gonzalez's publications and projects: Strangers No Longer Mexicans in Wisconsin Wisconsin Latinx History Collective PBS Wisconsin's The Look Back Wisconsin Historical Society's upcoming History Center Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies
“Wisconsin has always been my home. It's not a place, however, where I've always felt at home,” (ix) declares Dr. Sergio M. González in the first two lines of his acknowledgments for his recently published book Strangers No Longer: Latino Belonging & Faith in Twentieth-Century Wisconsin (University of Illinois Press, 2024). These two sentences are the essence of the manuscript as González guides the reader through a one-hundred-year history of Latino migration, settlement, and religious life in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and surrounding rural regions. Many different nationalities that fall under the banner of the “Latino” identity have made home, work, and life in Wisconsin, but their presence was met with varying scales of hospitality – the act of welcoming “the stranger.” He writes in the Introduction, “Strangers No Longer demonstrates that relationships within hospitality interactions are in fact relations of power” (3). It is through a framework of hospitality that González structures his manuscript to show how clergy and laity accepted, to varying degrees, newly arrived Latinos in Wisconsin. Wisconsin religious institutions have a long engagement with Latino populations. From the arrival of Mexican immigrant laborers in the 1920s who were recruited as strikebreakers, to post-war Tejano and Puerto Rican migrants who were encouraged to assimilate into eurocentric ideals of belonging, and finally to the 1980s Sanctuary Movement in which Central American asylees sought protection from state and federal immigration enforcement, each of these topics and more are covered in Strangers No Longer. González skillfully crafts a narrative where the reader witnesses the development of the relationship between Wisconsin religious institutions and various Latino communities as one moving from a relationship of paternalism in the early 20th century to one of self-determination by the late 20th century. “Wisconsin Latinos pushed churches to acknowledge that they were no longer guests in their communities, or, in the words of the organizers of a statewide conference held in Appleton in 1974, ‘strangers in our homeland'” (141). By the 21st century, González asserts, the church had become a site for Latino political consciousness and resistance for decades. González's methodological rigor, clear writing, and strong theoretical grounding allow the reader to understand the delicate political, racial, economic, and spiritual power relations at play for Latinos in the Midwest during the 20th century. Strangers No Longer is a valuable read for undergraduate courses in Latino history, religious history, and social movement history. Alongside his academic work, González is building out his public history projects that offer primers on the sanctuary movement, immigration history, and Latino religious life in the Midwest. Links to Dr. Gonzalez's publications and projects: Strangers No Longer Mexicans in Wisconsin Wisconsin Latinx History Collective PBS Wisconsin's The Look Back Wisconsin Historical Society's upcoming History Center Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
“Wisconsin has always been my home. It's not a place, however, where I've always felt at home,” (ix) declares Dr. Sergio M. González in the first two lines of his acknowledgments for his recently published book Strangers No Longer: Latino Belonging & Faith in Twentieth-Century Wisconsin (University of Illinois Press, 2024). These two sentences are the essence of the manuscript as González guides the reader through a one-hundred-year history of Latino migration, settlement, and religious life in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and surrounding rural regions. Many different nationalities that fall under the banner of the “Latino” identity have made home, work, and life in Wisconsin, but their presence was met with varying scales of hospitality – the act of welcoming “the stranger.” He writes in the Introduction, “Strangers No Longer demonstrates that relationships within hospitality interactions are in fact relations of power” (3). It is through a framework of hospitality that González structures his manuscript to show how clergy and laity accepted, to varying degrees, newly arrived Latinos in Wisconsin. Wisconsin religious institutions have a long engagement with Latino populations. From the arrival of Mexican immigrant laborers in the 1920s who were recruited as strikebreakers, to post-war Tejano and Puerto Rican migrants who were encouraged to assimilate into eurocentric ideals of belonging, and finally to the 1980s Sanctuary Movement in which Central American asylees sought protection from state and federal immigration enforcement, each of these topics and more are covered in Strangers No Longer. González skillfully crafts a narrative where the reader witnesses the development of the relationship between Wisconsin religious institutions and various Latino communities as one moving from a relationship of paternalism in the early 20th century to one of self-determination by the late 20th century. “Wisconsin Latinos pushed churches to acknowledge that they were no longer guests in their communities, or, in the words of the organizers of a statewide conference held in Appleton in 1974, ‘strangers in our homeland'” (141). By the 21st century, González asserts, the church had become a site for Latino political consciousness and resistance for decades. González's methodological rigor, clear writing, and strong theoretical grounding allow the reader to understand the delicate political, racial, economic, and spiritual power relations at play for Latinos in the Midwest during the 20th century. Strangers No Longer is a valuable read for undergraduate courses in Latino history, religious history, and social movement history. Alongside his academic work, González is building out his public history projects that offer primers on the sanctuary movement, immigration history, and Latino religious life in the Midwest. Links to Dr. Gonzalez's publications and projects: Strangers No Longer Mexicans in Wisconsin Wisconsin Latinx History Collective PBS Wisconsin's The Look Back Wisconsin Historical Society's upcoming History Center Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/christian-studies
Sergio Mínguez, director de Ponte a la Cola, nos habla del estreno de "Historia de una escalera".
En este episodio, Sergio Méndez, Country Head de BlackRock México, pudo platicar con Roberto Martínez, presidente de Pepsico Mexico Foods, posición a la que arribó tras 27 años dentro de Pepsico en especial dentro del área de marketing.Hablamos sobre las características del mercado en América Latina y cómo funciona el marketing dentro de la región. Roberto nos cuenta sobre lo que distingue al consumidor mexicano, el futuro digital del retail y la importante labor en responsabilidad social y ambiental que diseña y desarrolla.
En este primer episodio de la quinta temporada de Encuentro, Sergio Méndez, Country Head de BlackRock México, platica con José Pablo Coello. José Pablo es un experto en estrategias digitales, marketing, media for equity y medios digitales, pero es mucho mejor conocido como comentarista deportivo, profesión que con pasión ha podido desempeñar por más de 30 años en Grupo Radio Fórmula, MVS, Fox Sports y Televisa, narrando los Super Bowls de la NFL, la MLB, los torneos ATP y WTA de tenis y muchos más. José Pablo nos cuenta de su introducción al mundo del deporte desde pequeño y como ha sido algo que lo acompañado a través de las diferentes etapas de su carrera. Él ha visto de primera mano la transformación digital de la comunicación y nos cuenta de los retos que enfrentan los medios a futuro. Finalmente, hablamos sobre la importancia de una visión a largo plazo en las finanzas personales y la importancia del ahorro en México a pesar de los obstáculos actuales en cuanto a educación financiera y bancarización.
En este primer episodio de 2024 para Encuentro de BlackRock México, el Country Head para México Sergio Méndez platica con María del Carmen Bernal, una de las primeras personas en empujar el tema de la inclusión a nivel académico y profesional en México, y se autodenomina una experta en la promoción y permanencia del talento femenino en la alta dirección de las empresas. Fundó y dirigió el Centro de Investigación de la Mujer en la Alta Dirección en colaboración con el Instituto Panamericano de Alta Dirección de Empresa (IPADE) y hoy en día se dedica a dar consultoría a organizaciones para desarrollar una cultura incluyente.Hablan sobre cómo un primer momento de burnout para ella la impulsó a buscar hacer un cambio en cuanto a inclusión, sobre la importancia de tener un consejo de administración que demuestre la diversidad interna de las organizaciones, y en dónde se encuentra México y América Latina en cuanto a equidad e inclusión y su largo camino todavía por recorrer.
En entrevista para MVS Noticias con Sheila Amador en ausencia de Luis Cárdenas, el vocero de la Red de las Islas del Cielo, Sergio Müller, compartió inquietudes y detalles sobre el tren en Sonora, destacando su amenaza a ecosistemas frágiles y la falta de consulta con la población.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Podcast del programa Imagen Empresarial transmitido originalmente el 19 de diciembre de 2023. Conduce Juan Carlos De Lassé. Los entrevistados de hoy: Sergio Méndez, CEO de Red Rombo Group Tema: Actualidad y 2024
¡Bienvenidos a un nuevo episodio de El Calabozo Redux! Volvemos a detenernos en el apasionante mundo de los videojuegos y más concretamente en las aventuras gráficas, poniendo el foco en un producto hecho por y para amantes del culto: Nightmare Frames, una aventura creada por Posmodern Advetures, que ambientada en el Hollywood de los años 80 y en el cine de género nos sumerge en una historia pesadillesca en torno a la búsqueda de una película maldita y su negra leyenda. Con un fino sentido del humor, una gran recreación escénica y un trabajado contexto en el cine de terror de los años 80, "Nightmare Frames" es una aventura gráfica lanzada en el pasado 2022 y una parada obligatoria para este humilde rincón virtual. Acompaña al Reverendo el camarada Sergio Márquez (Balas y Katanas, Point 'n' Click Podcast), y ambos tienen el honor de estar acompañados del creador José María Meléndez, amante del culto y principal responsable tanto de Postmodern Adventures como de "Nightmare Frames". Enjoy! Si te ha gustado el programa, recuerda que tienes la posibilidad de ayudar a El Calabozo del Reverendo Wilson dándole a "Me gusta". ¡Gracias y feed the cvlt!
En entrevista para MVS Noticias con Ana Francisca Vega, Sergio Müller, director de Caminantes del Desierto A.C., habló sobre la construcción del “Tren Maya” de Sonora amenaza a más de 500 especies, entre ellas jaguares, ocelotes y osos negros. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Sergio Müller, ambientalista integrante de Caminantes del Desierto
En este nuevo episodio de Encuentro, Sergio Méndez de BlackRock México platica con Santiago García, el actual rector de la Universidad Panamericana (UP). Santiago es ingeniero industrial de profesión por la UP, empezando con un interés por la logística y luego, después de pasar por la Universidad de Navarra y el Georgia Tech, por la filosofía de la administración. Su trayectoria podría resumirse en querer "hablarle de filosofía a los empresarios, y hablarle de empresa a los filósofos." Hablamos sobre como puede desarrollarse la cultura organizacional, la administración de las instituciones educativas, cómo fomentar el trabajar con sentido y propósito, y cómo afrontar los nuevos retos tecnológicos en el trabajo con empatía.
En este episodio de Encuentro, el podcast de BlackRock México, Sergio Méndez, Country Manager de BlackRock México, entrevista a Jonathan Heath, subgobernador del Banco de México desde enero de 2019. Platicamos sobre el quehacer de un economista, el rol de la disciplina como ciencia social y cómo esta logra tener impacto dentro de la sociedad. Hablando sobre el Banco de México, tocamos el tema de la importancia de la autonomía que ha tenido la institución y el papel que este actuar autónomo ha tenido en la relativa estabilidad de precios en la economía mexicana desde hace más de dos décadas, a pesar de los periodos inflacionarios que han surgido en la economía global. Finalmente, hablamos sobre el impacto de las actuales tasas de interés en el mercado financiero mexicano, la capitalización de este, y la capacidad de ahorro mexicana, poniendo especial atención a la situación del ahorro para el retiro en el país.
ISR TOP 10 August 2023 as voted for by the listeners through our App. DJ ERIKMAX, STRAY SON, MARWOOD, Jafi Bravin, Dj Love, MoseoRsa, Sergio M, OneOfYou, PALANKAI, Madanelg
ISR TOP 10 August 2023 as voted for by the listeners through our App. DJ ERIKMAX, STRAY SON, MARWOOD, Jafi Bravin, Dj Love, MoseoRsa, Sergio M, OneOfYou, PALANKAI, Madanelg
ISR TOP 10 August 2023 as voted for by the listeners through our App. DJ ERIKMAX, STRAY SON, MARWOOD, Jafi Bravin, Dj Love, MoseoRsa, Sergio M, OneOfYou, PALANKAI, Madanelg
ISR TOP 10 August 2023 as voted for by the listeners through our App. DJ ERIKMAX, STRAY SON, MARWOOD, Jafi Bravin, Dj Love, MoseoRsa, Sergio M, OneOfYou, PALANKAI, Madanelg
ISR TOP 10 August 2023 as voted for by the listeners through our App. DJ ERIKMAX, STRAY SON, MARWOOD, Jafi Bravin, Dj Love, MoseoRsa, Sergio M, OneOfYou, PALANKAI, Madanelg
ISR TOP 10 August 2023 as voted for by the listeners through our App. DJ ERIKMAX, STRAY SON, MARWOOD, Jafi Bravin, Dj Love, MoseoRsa, Sergio M, OneOfYou, PALANKAI, Madanelg
ISR TOP 10 August 2023 as voted for by the listeners through our App. DJ ERIKMAX, STRAY SON, MARWOOD, Jafi Bravin, Dj Love, MoseoRsa, Sergio M, OneOfYou, PALANKAI, Madanelg
ISR TOP 10 August 2023 as voted for by the listeners through our App. DJ ERIKMAX, STRAY SON, MARWOOD, Jafi Bravin, Dj Love, MoseoRsa, Sergio M, OneOfYou, PALANKAI, Madanelg
ISR TOP 10 August 2023 as voted for by the listeners through our App. DJ ERIKMAX, STRAY SON, MARWOOD, Jafi Bravin, Dj Love, MoseoRsa, Sergio M, OneOfYou, PALANKAI, Madanelg
ISR TOP 10 August 2023 as voted for by the listeners through our App. DJ ERIKMAX, STRAY SON, MARWOOD, Jafi Bravin, Dj Love, MoseoRsa, Sergio M, OneOfYou, PALANKAI, Madanelg
El panorama de México según Sergio Méndez, el CEO de la gestora, el FMI se empareja con Hacienda en cuanto al PIB, la actividad económica se estanca y la economista en Jefe refuerza un mensaje.
El director general de la gestora de fondos en el país, Sergio Méndez, habla con Jimena Tolama sobre el creciente interés de los inversionistas internacionales, las tendencias del mercado y sus apuestas.
En este episodio Sergio Méndez (CEO de BlackRock México) platica con Mariana Sanz (Directora General de Edelman México) sobre lo que significa generar confianza en tiempos de desinformación, el barómetro de la confianza, y cómo las empresas pueden ser creíbles compartiendo información veraz a sus clientes.Nos adentramos a cómo el COVID aceleró la creación de confianza con los empleadores, viéndolos de un lado más humano, y cómo se ve el futuro de esta métrica para México y el mundo. El nivel de confianza en el sector financiero es más alto que el promedio en México.
Sergio Méndez (Director General de BlackRock México) platica con Fernanda Cosio (Vicepresidente en BlackRock México) sobre la responsabilidad fiduciaria, el significado de ser el responsable de la inversiones de otros y sobre el desarrollo de la carrera de Fernanda en el Banco de México y ahora en Blackrock.En este episodio nos adentramos al tema de la disciplina y humildad que se requiere para trabajar en finanzas y Fernanda nos comparte aprendizajes importantes su carrera profesional.
Sergio Méndez es el Director General de BlackRock México y Axel Christensen es el Director de Estrategia de Inversiones para América Latina de BlackRock. En este episodio platicamos sobre el contexto de los mercados para este año, los retos y oportunidades para México y también sobre herramientas puntuales para que las personas tengan un mejor futuro financiero este año.
A new research paper was published in Oncotarget's Volume 14 on January 12, 2023, entitled, “The chromatographic constitution of andiroba oil and its healing effects, compared to the LLLT outcomes, in oral mucositis induced in golden Syrian hamsters: a new treatment option.” The oral mucositis is a mucosal alteration that usually arises from oncological treatments, such as chemotherapy, and it is characterized as an inflammatory process. In this new study, researchers Jessica T. Gomes, Ana Márcia V. Wanzeler, Sergio M.A. Júnior, Rosa Helena F. Chaves Soares, Carolina P. de Oliveira, Emanuelle de M. Rodrigues, Bruno M. Soares, Diego D.F.A. Alcantara, Rommel M.R. Burbano, and Fabrício M. Tuji from Federal University of Pará and the University Center of Pará aimed to demonstrate the chromatographic constitution of Andiroba oil, while comparing and evaluating Andiroba oil and laser scarring efficiency in treatments of oral mucositis in hamsters. “The low-level laser therapy (LLLT) is the best standard treatment and the most efficient method in treating OM. Similarly, the andiroba oil presents great potential for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. Thus, this study aims to evaluate the healing and toxicological effects of andiroba oil, compared to the LLLT outcomes, observing if andiroba presents a similar/higher potential than the LLLT.” The animals were submitted to 5-Fluorouracil. Included in the study were total of 122 animals that were randomized and divided into the following groups: (a) positive control; (b) laser associated to andiroba oil; (c) laser; (d) andiroba oil; (e) negative control; (f) cyclophosphamide (genotoxicity control). The induction of oral mucositis occurred by the administration of intraperitoneal Fluorouracila (60 mg/kg) and trauma to the mucosa. The laser protocol was performed once a day and the andiroba oil applied 3 times a day (1,5 ml/day). The mucosae were photographed and removed for clinical and histopathological analysis on day 4, 8, 12, and 15. The analysis was based in OM severity, in specific scoring for the clinical and histopathological aspect. Toxicity was evaluated on day 15 using comet assay and it was performed by variant DNA damage parameters. The data were analyzed using analysis of variance (ANOVA) Tukey post-test and Kruskal–Wallis Dunn post-test. The “andiroba oil” and “laser” groups presented better results when compared to the control groups and the treatment associations. The andiroba oil presented the best scarring results, even considering its efficiency proximity to the laser treatment. “Andiroba and laser, separately, did not present genotoxicity, however their association evidences damage to DNA.” DOI: https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.28338 Correspondence to: Diego D.F.A. Alcantara - diegoalcantara@globo.com Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMwTGk7-VGU Keywords: phytotherapeutic drugs, medical oncology, stomatitis, wound healing, low-level light therapy About Oncotarget: Oncotarget (a primarily oncology-focused, peer-reviewed, open access journal) aims to maximize research impact through insightful peer-review; eliminate borders between specialties by linking different fields of oncology, cancer research and biomedical sciences; and foster application of basic and clinical science. To learn more about Oncotarget, visit Oncotarget.com and connect with us on social media: Twitter – https://twitter.com/Oncotarget Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/Oncotarget YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@OncotargetJournal Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/oncotargetjrnl/ LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/oncotarget/ Pinterest – https://www.pinterest.com/oncotarget/ LabTube – https://www.labtube.tv/channel/MTY5OA SoundCloud – https://soundcloud.com/oncotarget For media inquiries, please contact: media@impactjournals.com.
Taken Directly from his IMDB page, "Sergio M. Lorenzana is an award-winning Cinematographer from Chesapeake, Virginia. Most commonly known for his commercial and fashion work featuring brands and talent such as Adidas, Nike, Nissan, Air Jordans, T.I, Akoo, No Malice, Philly Freeway, Shy Glizzy, Pharrell Williams, Playboi Carti, Kat Von D, Shomi Patwary, and Lil Uzi Vert. His content has been featured on MTV, BET, Online, and Magazines, garnering over 100 million views total" --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/loveletterstovirginia/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/loveletterstovirginia/support
Sergio Méndez, Director General de BlackRock México, nos comparte los tres temas de inversión y las fuerzas de cambio que podemos esperar para este 2021.