1,721,643 research outputs found

    Análisis CIPEI No. 30. La FIFA como fenómeno global : un análisis del mundial de Qatar desde las Relaciones Internacionales

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    Fil: Tuninetti, Adrián. Universidad Nacional de Rosario. Facultad de Ciencia Política y Relaciones Internacionales; Argentina

    Estudio de las variaciones del clima y la necesidad de estandarización de datos

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    Fil: Forgioni, Fernando Primo. Universidad Nacional de Villa María; Argentina.Fil: Tuninetti, Luis Enrique. Universidad Nacional de Villa María; Argentina

    Estudio de las variaciones temporales del clima en la región central de la provincia de Córdoba

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    Fil: Tuninetti, Luis Enrique. Universidad Nacional de Villa María; Argentina.Fil: Salvatierra, Paola. Universidad Nacional de Villa María; Argentina.Fil: Forgioni, Fernando Primo. Universidad Nacional de Villa María; Argentina

    La actuación del síndico ante los recursos ordinarios

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    Fil: Pidoux, Raúl. Universidad Nacional Villa María; Argentina.Fil: Tuninetti, Esther C., . Universidad Nacional de Villa María; Argentina

    Multiple-access block-fading channels

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    El medio ambiente como derecho humano. Normativa y decisiones judiciales de Argentina y de la Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos: ¿es posible aplicarlas en Amazonia?

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    Fil: Juárez Centeno, Carlos. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales. Centro de Estudios Avanzados; Argentina.Fil: Juárez Centeno, Carlos. Consejo Federal de Estudios Internacionales; Argentina.Fil: Tuninetti, Adrián. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Facultad de Derecho; Argentina.Fil: Tuninetti, Adrián. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales. Centro de Estudios Avanzados; Argentina.La presente colaboración se plantea servir de herramienta para analizar, desde el derechocomparado, si tanto normativas internas como también decisiones judiciales de Argentina relativas a laprotección del medio ambiente pueden ser de aplicación en la Amazonia. Asimismo y con el mismo fin, setraen a consideración decisiones y documentos de aplicación en el Sistema Interamericano. Además, se ofrecela preocupación esgrimida por la Iglesia Católica a través de la encíclica papal Laudato Sí. Se plantea quetodo ese plexo normativo, declarativo y judicial puede ser de utilidad para que tanto desde la sociedad civilcomo los estados nacionales involucrados, tomen las banderas de la protección del medio ambiente con lameta de evitar aún más la degradación de esa región, principal pulmón verde del planeta.Fil: Juárez Centeno, Carlos. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales. Centro de Estudios Avanzados; Argentina.Fil: Juárez Centeno, Carlos. Consejo Federal de Estudios Internacionales; Argentina.Fil: Tuninetti, Adrián. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Facultad de Derecho; Argentina.Fil: Tuninetti, Adrián. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales. Centro de Estudios Avanzados; Argentina.Otras Ciencias Sociale

    Water footprint assessment in space and time to support local and global sustainability

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    Crop production vastly dominates global freshwater use, accounting for nearly 70% of the total withdrawal and around 90% of the total consumption. Human beings are currently using 30% of precipitation-recharged soil moisture and less than 10% (i.e., 3800 km3yr-1}) of the maximum available renewable freshwater resources in the word. Notwithstanding, water resource availability is highly variable in space and time, and different studies have shown a significant mismatch between water use and availability. Accordingly, two-third of global population live under conditions of sever water scarcity for at least one month per year. Moreover, as a consequence of larger food demand and changing living standards, toward more caloric and protein intense diets, global water use has increased by 6-8 times during the past century. At the same time, areas equipped for irrigation have doubled with actual irrigation having unavoidable consequences for aquifers and river ecosystems. Future scenarios of climate change are expected to worsen this picture. Indeed, the rising trends of water demand may continue in the future, harshening the conditions in areas reaching critical thresholds of acceptable water balance. In this context, the goals of this thesis are (i) to identify the main determinants of water use efficiency in agriculture; (ii) to introduce a link prediction algorithm applied to the international trade of agricultural goods; (iii) to introduce a novel indicator to monitor the (mis)match between water use and supply. This thesis quantifies the crop water footprint (CWF, or amount of water use per unit weight of crop) of nine major crops (i.e., wheat, rice, maize, soybean, barley, potatoes, sugar cane, sugar beet, and cotton) through a daily soil water balance run on a grid with a 5’x5’ spatial resolution. The model considers scenarios of rainfed and irrigated crops, also exploring multi-cropping patterns. Quantitative assessments of green and blue (separated into surface and ground) CWF are mapped and analysed in order to identify and monitor the major local drivers of water use, such as climatic conditions, precipitation rate during the growing season, cropping calendar, soil properties, crop yields and agricultural management practises. Results show that crop yield is the most important determinant of the total CWF. Moreover, results of a first-order sensitivity analysis show that, e.g., wheat CWF is mostly sensitive to the length of the growing period, rice CWF to the reference evapotranspiration depth, soybean and maize CWF to the planting date. The CWF model has been adopted also to validate a Fast Track approach, recently developed to study the CWF changes in time, which are generally kept aside in Water Footprint assessments. This approach ascribes the temporal CWF changes only to the yield variations, while it assumes the evapotranspiration depth as time-invariant. This thesis shows the good performance of this approach and also provides an uncertainty analysis. Accordingly, the Fast Track approach shows an error three times smaller than the uncertainty associated with the CWF model. Following the yields patterns, CWF has significantly decreased along the period 1961-2013, but with different rates depending on the crop and the location of the production sites. In the second part of the thesis, the crop water footprint is compared to the local water availability, to assess the sustainability of crop production. In order to understand the size of local (mis)match between crop water use and available water resources, we introduce a water debt repayment time indicator (WD). The WD quantifies the time the hydrological cycle takes to replenish the water resources used for annual crop production, distinguishing the different sustainability levels of soil-, surface-, and ground-water. This indicator highlights the locations and typology of threats imposed by agricultural production on water resources. On a global average, we found that wheat and rice production critically overuses ground water resources, especially in China and the US, and cotton production overuses both surface -and ground-water, particularly in the US. Locally, unsustainable annual crop production is found over the Sabarmati basin (due to wheat) in India, and in the Chao Phraya basin (due to rice and sugarcane) in Thailand, where the water debt repayment time exceeds 5 years in many cultivated areas. Including in the same framework analyses on water use efficiencies (through the CWF) and measure of water use (un)sustainability (through the WD) enables screening analyses at finding specific solutions in cases of low water use efficiencies and/or in critical situation of overuses. While local drivers monitor the water use for production, global drivers attempt to explore the globalization of water resources that happens through the international trade of agricultural goods. Why do countries become trade patterns, hence establishing a more or less stable relation, which implies externalization of water resources use? The third part of this thesis answers to this question through the elaboration of a threshold-based link prediction algorithm, aiming at finding the drivers behind link activation. Accordingly, a link is expected to exist depending on the predicted virtual water volume traded from the source node to the target node: the link is modelled as active when the volume is higher than 1000 m3y-1, non-active otherwise. This algorithm is able to capture 84% of the currently active links and 93% of non-active links. Country population, geographical distance between countries and fertilizers use are the major drivers to explain link existence. The link prediction model may be applied to build future scenarios of virtual water trade, in order to understand how local consumption and production patterns could affect the trade network. Finally, in order to understand how close water demand to water availability is, we introduce a water debt (WD) indicator. The WD quantifies the payback time the hydrological cycle takes to replenish the water resources used for annual crop production. Hence, it highlights the locations and typology of threats imposed by agricultural production on water resources. E.g., the annual production of the nine study crops arise a WD of 10 years with the ground water resources of the US High Plain aquifer, mostly as a consequence of maize and soybean production. This indicator intends to connect and integrate water resource management with other environmental issues, such as the carbon footprint. In short, the thesis contributes advancing our knowledge in the spatio-temporal explicit water footprint assessments, virtual water trade network, sustainable water use. The models developed in this thesis and the results shown in the following chapters allow (i) to explore pathways toward improved water use efficiencies and more sustainable water withdrawals, (ii) to model backward and forward trade network dynamics, and (iii) to project future water use scenarios

    Derechos humanos en Lationoamérica : reflexiones en clave de post pandemia

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    Fil: Juárez Centeno, Carlos. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Sociales. Centro de Estudios Avanzados; Argentina.Fil: Juárez Centeno, Carlos. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Derecho; Argentina.Fil: Juárez Centeno, Carlos. Universidad Blas Pascal; Argentina.Fil: Tuninetti, Adrián. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Derecho; Argentina.Fil: Tuninetti, Adrián. Universidad Blas Pascal; Argentina.Este artigo analisa o contexto geopolítico na América Latina após dois anos da declaração da pandemia do Coronavírus, que representou um desafio político, econômico e social para os países da região. As ações dos governos latino-americanos foram díspares no enfrentamento dos efeitos da expansão do vírus Covid-19, que destacou a crise na ordem internacional e na América Latina em particular. Pretende-se conceituar o atual processo de globalização, o tratamento dos Direitos Humanos na região durante esse período, bem como ensaiar alguns eixos diante dos desafios que surgirão diante do pós-pandemia.En el presente artículo se analiza el contexto geopolítico en América Latina luego de dos años de la declaración de la pandemia de Coronavirus que significó un desafío político, económico y social para los países de la región. La actuación de los gobiernos latinoamericanos fue dispar en lo que respecta a hacer frente a los efectos de la expansión del virus Covid-19 que puso en evidencia la crisis del orden internacional y de Latinoamérica en particular. Se pretende conceptualizar el proceso actual de globalización, el tratamiento de los Derechos Humanos en la región durante este período como así también ensayar algunos ejes frente a los desafíos que se presentarán de cara a la post pandemia.https://periodicos.ufes.br/agora/article/view/38090info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionFil: Juárez Centeno, Carlos. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Sociales. Centro de Estudios Avanzados; Argentina.Fil: Juárez Centeno, Carlos. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Derecho; Argentina.Fil: Juárez Centeno, Carlos. Universidad Blas Pascal; Argentina.Fil: Tuninetti, Adrián. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Derecho; Argentina.Fil: Tuninetti, Adrián. Universidad Blas Pascal; Argentina.Otras Ciencias Sociale

    Estudio de extremos de temperatura en la zona centro-sur de Córdoba en base a índices del conjunto Climdex

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    Fil: Tuninetti, Luis Enrique. Universidad Nacional Villa María; Argentina..Fil: Forgioni, Fernando Primo. Universidad Nacional Villa María; Argentina..Fil: Ritta, Florencia Natali. Universidad Nacional Villa María; Argentina..Fil: Romero, Ana Lucía. Universidad Nacional Villa María; Argentina.
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