Poder y cambio institucional: de la dependencia de la trayectoria a las teorías del cambio gradual

El institucionalismo histórico da especial importancia teórica al poder en la comprensión de las instituciones, pero cuando adopta el concepto de dependencia de la trayectoria para explicar el cambio institucional cae en un dilema teórico: la dependencia de la trayectoria es atractiva pues da de gran autonomía a la dimensión institucional, pero la aísla de la influencia de las asimetrías de poder. Las teorías posteriores del cambio endógeno y gradual intentan solucionar este problema reintroduciendo el poder, pero dan lugar a un panorama fragmentado y repleto de tensiones teóricas.

Guardado en:

0124-5996

2346-2450

23

2021-07-01

83

108

Federico Traversa - 2021

Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0.

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2

id f768954f11b74bc9680e69daaf10a477
record_format ojs
institution UNIVERSIDAD EXTERNADO DE COLOMBIA
thumbnail https://nuevo.metarevistas.org/UNIVERSIDADEXTERNADODECOLOMBIA/logo.png
country_str Colombia
collection Revista de Economía Institucional
title Poder y cambio institucional: de la dependencia de la trayectoria a las teorías del cambio gradual
spellingShingle Poder y cambio institucional: de la dependencia de la trayectoria a las teorías del cambio gradual
Traversa, Federico
B52, P48, D70
B52, P48, D70
cambio institucional, dependencia de la trayectoria, institucionalismo histórico
mudança institucional, dependência da trajetória, Institucionalismo Histórico
Institutional change, path dependence, Historical Institutionalism
B52, P48, D70
title_short Poder y cambio institucional: de la dependencia de la trayectoria a las teorías del cambio gradual
title_full Poder y cambio institucional: de la dependencia de la trayectoria a las teorías del cambio gradual
title_fullStr Poder y cambio institucional: de la dependencia de la trayectoria a las teorías del cambio gradual
title_full_unstemmed Poder y cambio institucional: de la dependencia de la trayectoria a las teorías del cambio gradual
title_sort poder y cambio institucional: de la dependencia de la trayectoria a las teorías del cambio gradual
title_eng Power and institutional change: From path dependence to theories of gradual change
description El institucionalismo histórico da especial importancia teórica al poder en la comprensión de las instituciones, pero cuando adopta el concepto de dependencia de la trayectoria para explicar el cambio institucional cae en un dilema teórico: la dependencia de la trayectoria es atractiva pues da de gran autonomía a la dimensión institucional, pero la aísla de la influencia de las asimetrías de poder. Las teorías posteriores del cambio endógeno y gradual intentan solucionar este problema reintroduciendo el poder, pero dan lugar a un panorama fragmentado y repleto de tensiones teóricas.
description_eng Historical institutionalism gives special importance to power asymmetries for understanding institutions, but by adopting the concept of path dependence to explain institutional dynamics also falls into a theoretical dilemma. On the one hand path dependence becomes attractive insofar as it gives autonomy to institutional dimension, but on the other hand it isolates institutions from the influence of power asymmetries. Later theories of gradual endogenous change attempt to solve this problem by reintroducing power, but leave a fragmented panorama, full of underlying theoretical tensions for historical institutionalism.
author Traversa, Federico
author_facet Traversa, Federico
topicspa_str_mv B52, P48, D70
B52, P48, D70
cambio institucional, dependencia de la trayectoria, institucionalismo histórico
mudança institucional, dependência da trajetória, Institucionalismo Histórico
topic B52, P48, D70
B52, P48, D70
cambio institucional, dependencia de la trayectoria, institucionalismo histórico
mudança institucional, dependência da trajetória, Institucionalismo Histórico
Institutional change, path dependence, Historical Institutionalism
B52, P48, D70
topic_facet B52, P48, D70
B52, P48, D70
cambio institucional, dependencia de la trayectoria, institucionalismo histórico
mudança institucional, dependência da trajetória, Institucionalismo Histórico
Institutional change, path dependence, Historical Institutionalism
B52, P48, D70
citationvolume 23
citationissue 45
citationedition Núm. 45 , Año 2021 : Julio-diciembre
publisher Universidad Externado de Colombia
ispartofjournal Revista de Economía Institucional
source https://revistas.uexternado.edu.co/index.php/ecoins/article/view/7333
language Español
format Article
rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
Federico Traversa - 2021
Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0.
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
references <p>Arrow, K. J. (1950). A difficulty in the concept of social welfare. Journal of political economy, 58(4), 328-346.<br>Campbell, J. L. (2010a). Institutional reproduction and change. The Oxford handbook of comparative institutional analysis, 87-116.<br>Campillo, I. y Sola, J. (2020). Power resources theory: A critical reassesment. Revista Española de Investigaciones Sociológicas, 170, 19-34.<br>Capoccia, G. (2016). When do institutions “bite”? Historical institutionalism and the politics of institutional change. Comparative Political Studies, 49(8), 1095-1127.<br>Collier, D., Munck, G. L. et al. (2017). Symposium on critical junctures and historical legacies. Symposium on Critical Junctures and Historical Legacies, 1-47.<br>Collier, R. B. y Collier, D. (2002). Shaping the political arena: Critical junctures, the labor movement, and regime dynamics in Latin America, [https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8qr1z7gc].<br>Conran, J. y Thelen, K. A. (2016). Institutional change. En O. Fioretos, T. G. Falleti y A. Sheingate (eds.), The Oxford handbook of historical institutionalism (pp. 51-70). Oxford: Oxford University Press.<br>David, P. A. (1985). Clio and the economics of QWERTY. The American Economic Review, 75(2), 332-337.<br>David, P. A. (2007). Path dependence: A foundational concept for historical social science. Cliometrica, 1(2), 91-114.<br>Davis, L. y North, D. (1970). Institutional change and American economic growth: A first step towards a theory of institutional innovation. The Journal of Economic History, 30(1), 131-149.<br>DellaPosta, D., Nee, V. y Opper, S. (2017). Endogenous dynamics of institutional change. Rationality and Society, 29(1), 5-48.<br>Evans, P. B., Rueschemeyer, D. y Skocpol, T. (eds.), (1985). Bringing the state back in. Cambridge-Nueva York: Cambridge University Press.<br>Fligstein, N. (2008). Fields, power and social skill: A critical analysis of the New Institutionalisms. International Public Management Review, 9(1), 227-253.<br>Fligstein, N. y Shin, T. (2007). Shareholder value and the transformation of the U.S. economy, 1984-2001. Sociological Forum, 22(4), 399-424.<br>Geddes, B. (2003). Paradigms and sand castles: Theory building and research design in comparative politics. University of Michigan Press.<br>Goodin, R. E. y Klingemann, H.-D. (1996). A new handbook of political science. Oxford: OUP.<br>Greif, A. y Laitin, D. D. (2004). A theory of endogenous institutional change. American political science review, 98(4), 633-652.<br>Hacker, J. S. (2004). Privatizing risk without privatizing the welfare state: The hidden politics of social policy retrenchment in the United States. American Political Science Review, 98(2), 243-260.<br>Hall, P. A. (2010). Historical institutionalism in rationalist and sociological perspective. En J. Mahoney y H. Thelen (eds.), Explaining institutional change: Ambiguity, agency, and power (pp. 204-224). Nueva York: Cambridge University Press.<br>Hall, P. A. y Taylor, R. C. (1996). Political science and the three new institutionalisms. Political studies, 44(5), 936-957.<br>Heijden, J. van der, y Kuhlmann, J. (2017). Studying incremental institutional change: A systematic and critical meta-review of the literature from 2005 to 2015. Policy Studies Journal, 45(3), 535-554.<br>Henig, J. (2008). Education policy from 1980 to the present: The politics of privatization. En B. J Glenn y S. M Teles (eds.), Conservatism in American Political Development (pp. 291-323). Oxford-Nueva York: Oxford University Press.<br>Ikenberry, G. J. (1994). History’s heavy hand: Institutions and the politics of the state. Manuscrito no publicado.<br>Immergut, E. M. (1998). The theoretical core of the new institutionalism. Politics &amp; Society, 26(1), 5-34.<br>Knight, J. (1992). Institutions and social conflict. Cambridge-Nueva York; Cambridge University Press.<br>Korpi, W. (1983). Democratic class struggle. Nueva York: Routledge &amp; Kegan Paul.<br>Krasner, S. D. (1984). Approaches to the State: Alternative conceptions and historical dynamics. Comparative Politics, 16(2), 223-246.<br>Lomazoff, E. (2012). Turning (into) “The great regulating wheel”: The conversion of the Bank of the United States, 1791-1811. Studies in American Political Development, 26(1), 1-23.<br>Mahoney, J. (2000). Path dependence in historical sociology. Theory and Society, 29(4), 507-548.<br>Mahoney, J. (2001). The legacies of Liberalism: Path dependence and political regimes in Central America. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press.<br>Mahoney, J. y Thelen, K. (2010). A theory of gradual institutional change. En J. Mahoney y K. Thelen (eds.), Explaining institutional change: Ambiguity, agency, and power (pp. 1-37). Cambridge-Nueva York: Cambridge University Press<br>Mahoney, J. y Schensul, D. (2006) Historical context and path dependence. En R. E. Goodin y C. Tilli (eds.), The Oxford handbook of contextual political analysis. Oxford, NY: Oxford University Press.<br>March, J. G. y Olsen, J. P. (1983). The new institutionalism: Organizational factors in political life. American political science review, 78(3), 734-749.<br>Meyer, J. W. y Rowan, B. (1977). Institutionalized organizations: Formal structure as myth and ceremony. American Journal of Sociology, 83(2), 340-363.<br>Peters, B. G. (2003). El nuevo institucionalismo: la teoría institucional en ciencia política. Barcelona: Gedisa.<br>Pierson, P. (2000). Increasing returns, path dependence, and the study of politics. The American Political Science Review, 94(2), 251-267.<br>Pierson, P. (2006). Sobrellevando la austeridad permanente: reestructuración del Estado de Bienestar en las democracias desarrolladas. Zona abierta, 114, 43-120.<br>Pierson, P. y Skocpol, T. (2002). Historical institutionalism in contemporary political science. En I. Katznelson y H. V. Milner (eds.), Political science: The state of the discipline (pp. 693-721). Nueva York: W.W. Norton.<br>Roberts, K. M. (2013). Market reform, programmatic (de)alignment, and party system stability in Latin America. Comparative Political Studies, 46(11), 1422-1452.<br>Rocco, P. y Thurston, C. (2014). From metaphors to measures: Observable indicators of gradual institutional change. Journal of Public Policy, 34(1), 35-62.<br>Rothstein, B. (1996). Political institutions: An overview. En R. E. Goodin y H.-D. Klingemann (eds.), A new handbook of political science (pp. 133-166). Oxford-Nueva York: Oxford University Press.<br>Sait, E. M. (1938). Political institutions: A preface. Century Political series. Nueva York: D. Appleton-Century Company.<br>Sewell, W. H. (1996). Three temporalities: Toward an eventful sociology. En T. J. McDonald (ed.), The historic turn in the human sciences (pp. 245-280). Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.<br>Schickler, E. (2001). Disjointed pluralism: Institutional innovation and the development of the US Congress. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.<br>Skocpol, T. (1995). Protecting soldiers and mothers. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.<br>Slater, D. y Simmons, E. (2010). Informative regress: Critical antecedents in comparative politics. Comparative Political Studies, 43(7), 886-917.<br>Soifer, H. D. (2012). The causal logic of critical junctures. Comparative political studies, 45(12), 1572-1597.<br>Steinmo, S. y Thelen, K. (1992). Historical institutionalism in comparative politics. En Structuring politics: Historical institutionalism in comparative analysis (pp. 1-32). Cambridge-Nueva York: Cambridge University Press.<br>Thelen, K. (1999). Historical Institutionalism in comparative politics. Annual Review of Political Science, 2(1), 369-404.<br>Thelen, K. (2004). How institutions evolve: The political economy of skills in Germany, Britain, the United States, and Japan. Cambridge-Nueva York: Cambridge University Press.<br>Trigo, L. G. (2015). El debate sobre la noción de path dependence y su conciliación en un modelo dinámico de análisis institucional. Revista Chilena de Derecho y Ciencia Política, 6(1), 81-107.<br>Weingast, B. R. y Marshall, W. J. (1988). The industrial organization of Congress; or, why legislatures, like firms, are not organized as markets. Journal of Political Economy, 96(1), 132-163.<br>Weyland, K. (2008). Toward a new theory of institutional change. World Politics, 60(2), 281-314.</p>
type_driver info:eu-repo/semantics/article
type_coar http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501
type_version info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
type_coarversion http://purl.org/coar/version/c_970fb48d4fbd8a85
type_content Text
publishDate 2021-07-01
date_accessioned 2021-07-01T07:01:15Z
date_available 2021-07-01T07:01:15Z
url https://revistas.uexternado.edu.co/index.php/ecoins/article/view/7333
url_doi https://doi.org/10.18601/01245996.v23n45.05
issn 0124-5996
eissn 2346-2450
doi 10.18601/01245996.v23n45.05
citationstartpage 83
citationendpage 108
url4_str_mv https://revistas.uexternado.edu.co/index.php/ecoins/article/download/7333/13265
url3_str_mv https://revistas.uexternado.edu.co/index.php/ecoins/article/download/7333/13165
url2_str_mv https://revistas.uexternado.edu.co/index.php/ecoins/article/download/7333/10058
_version_ 1797158425241583616
spelling Poder y cambio institucional: de la dependencia de la trayectoria a las teorías del cambio gradual
<p>Arrow, K. J. (1950). A difficulty in the concept of social welfare. Journal of political economy, 58(4), 328-346.<br>Campbell, J. L. (2010a). Institutional reproduction and change. The Oxford handbook of comparative institutional analysis, 87-116.<br>Campillo, I. y Sola, J. (2020). Power resources theory: A critical reassesment. Revista Española de Investigaciones Sociológicas, 170, 19-34.<br>Capoccia, G. (2016). When do institutions “bite”? Historical institutionalism and the politics of institutional change. Comparative Political Studies, 49(8), 1095-1127.<br>Collier, D., Munck, G. L. et al. (2017). Symposium on critical junctures and historical legacies. Symposium on Critical Junctures and Historical Legacies, 1-47.<br>Collier, R. B. y Collier, D. (2002). Shaping the political arena: Critical junctures, the labor movement, and regime dynamics in Latin America, [https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8qr1z7gc].<br>Conran, J. y Thelen, K. A. (2016). Institutional change. En O. Fioretos, T. G. Falleti y A. Sheingate (eds.), The Oxford handbook of historical institutionalism (pp. 51-70). Oxford: Oxford University Press.<br>David, P. A. (1985). Clio and the economics of QWERTY. The American Economic Review, 75(2), 332-337.<br>David, P. A. (2007). Path dependence: A foundational concept for historical social science. Cliometrica, 1(2), 91-114.<br>Davis, L. y North, D. (1970). Institutional change and American economic growth: A first step towards a theory of institutional innovation. The Journal of Economic History, 30(1), 131-149.<br>DellaPosta, D., Nee, V. y Opper, S. (2017). Endogenous dynamics of institutional change. Rationality and Society, 29(1), 5-48.<br>Evans, P. B., Rueschemeyer, D. y Skocpol, T. (eds.), (1985). Bringing the state back in. Cambridge-Nueva York: Cambridge University Press.<br>Fligstein, N. (2008). Fields, power and social skill: A critical analysis of the New Institutionalisms. International Public Management Review, 9(1), 227-253.<br>Fligstein, N. y Shin, T. (2007). Shareholder value and the transformation of the U.S. economy, 1984-2001. Sociological Forum, 22(4), 399-424.<br>Geddes, B. (2003). Paradigms and sand castles: Theory building and research design in comparative politics. University of Michigan Press.<br>Goodin, R. E. y Klingemann, H.-D. (1996). A new handbook of political science. Oxford: OUP.<br>Greif, A. y Laitin, D. D. (2004). A theory of endogenous institutional change. American political science review, 98(4), 633-652.<br>Hacker, J. S. (2004). Privatizing risk without privatizing the welfare state: The hidden politics of social policy retrenchment in the United States. American Political Science Review, 98(2), 243-260.<br>Hall, P. A. (2010). Historical institutionalism in rationalist and sociological perspective. En J. Mahoney y H. Thelen (eds.), Explaining institutional change: Ambiguity, agency, and power (pp. 204-224). Nueva York: Cambridge University Press.<br>Hall, P. A. y Taylor, R. C. (1996). Political science and the three new institutionalisms. Political studies, 44(5), 936-957.<br>Heijden, J. van der, y Kuhlmann, J. (2017). Studying incremental institutional change: A systematic and critical meta-review of the literature from 2005 to 2015. Policy Studies Journal, 45(3), 535-554.<br>Henig, J. (2008). Education policy from 1980 to the present: The politics of privatization. En B. J Glenn y S. M Teles (eds.), Conservatism in American Political Development (pp. 291-323). Oxford-Nueva York: Oxford University Press.<br>Ikenberry, G. J. (1994). History’s heavy hand: Institutions and the politics of the state. Manuscrito no publicado.<br>Immergut, E. M. (1998). The theoretical core of the new institutionalism. Politics &amp; Society, 26(1), 5-34.<br>Knight, J. (1992). Institutions and social conflict. Cambridge-Nueva York; Cambridge University Press.<br>Korpi, W. (1983). Democratic class struggle. Nueva York: Routledge &amp; Kegan Paul.<br>Krasner, S. D. (1984). Approaches to the State: Alternative conceptions and historical dynamics. Comparative Politics, 16(2), 223-246.<br>Lomazoff, E. (2012). Turning (into) “The great regulating wheel”: The conversion of the Bank of the United States, 1791-1811. Studies in American Political Development, 26(1), 1-23.<br>Mahoney, J. (2000). Path dependence in historical sociology. Theory and Society, 29(4), 507-548.<br>Mahoney, J. (2001). The legacies of Liberalism: Path dependence and political regimes in Central America. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press.<br>Mahoney, J. y Thelen, K. (2010). A theory of gradual institutional change. En J. Mahoney y K. Thelen (eds.), Explaining institutional change: Ambiguity, agency, and power (pp. 1-37). Cambridge-Nueva York: Cambridge University Press<br>Mahoney, J. y Schensul, D. (2006) Historical context and path dependence. En R. E. Goodin y C. Tilli (eds.), The Oxford handbook of contextual political analysis. Oxford, NY: Oxford University Press.<br>March, J. G. y Olsen, J. P. (1983). The new institutionalism: Organizational factors in political life. American political science review, 78(3), 734-749.<br>Meyer, J. W. y Rowan, B. (1977). Institutionalized organizations: Formal structure as myth and ceremony. American Journal of Sociology, 83(2), 340-363.<br>Peters, B. G. (2003). El nuevo institucionalismo: la teoría institucional en ciencia política. Barcelona: Gedisa.<br>Pierson, P. (2000). Increasing returns, path dependence, and the study of politics. The American Political Science Review, 94(2), 251-267.<br>Pierson, P. (2006). Sobrellevando la austeridad permanente: reestructuración del Estado de Bienestar en las democracias desarrolladas. Zona abierta, 114, 43-120.<br>Pierson, P. y Skocpol, T. (2002). Historical institutionalism in contemporary political science. En I. Katznelson y H. V. Milner (eds.), Political science: The state of the discipline (pp. 693-721). Nueva York: W.W. Norton.<br>Roberts, K. M. (2013). Market reform, programmatic (de)alignment, and party system stability in Latin America. Comparative Political Studies, 46(11), 1422-1452.<br>Rocco, P. y Thurston, C. (2014). From metaphors to measures: Observable indicators of gradual institutional change. Journal of Public Policy, 34(1), 35-62.<br>Rothstein, B. (1996). Political institutions: An overview. En R. E. Goodin y H.-D. Klingemann (eds.), A new handbook of political science (pp. 133-166). Oxford-Nueva York: Oxford University Press.<br>Sait, E. M. (1938). Political institutions: A preface. Century Political series. Nueva York: D. Appleton-Century Company.<br>Sewell, W. H. (1996). Three temporalities: Toward an eventful sociology. En T. J. McDonald (ed.), The historic turn in the human sciences (pp. 245-280). Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.<br>Schickler, E. (2001). Disjointed pluralism: Institutional innovation and the development of the US Congress. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.<br>Skocpol, T. (1995). Protecting soldiers and mothers. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.<br>Slater, D. y Simmons, E. (2010). Informative regress: Critical antecedents in comparative politics. Comparative Political Studies, 43(7), 886-917.<br>Soifer, H. D. (2012). The causal logic of critical junctures. Comparative political studies, 45(12), 1572-1597.<br>Steinmo, S. y Thelen, K. (1992). Historical institutionalism in comparative politics. En Structuring politics: Historical institutionalism in comparative analysis (pp. 1-32). Cambridge-Nueva York: Cambridge University Press.<br>Thelen, K. (1999). Historical Institutionalism in comparative politics. Annual Review of Political Science, 2(1), 369-404.<br>Thelen, K. (2004). How institutions evolve: The political economy of skills in Germany, Britain, the United States, and Japan. Cambridge-Nueva York: Cambridge University Press.<br>Trigo, L. G. (2015). El debate sobre la noción de path dependence y su conciliación en un modelo dinámico de análisis institucional. Revista Chilena de Derecho y Ciencia Política, 6(1), 81-107.<br>Weingast, B. R. y Marshall, W. J. (1988). The industrial organization of Congress; or, why legislatures, like firms, are not organized as markets. Journal of Political Economy, 96(1), 132-163.<br>Weyland, K. (2008). Toward a new theory of institutional change. World Politics, 60(2), 281-314.</p>
Universidad Externado de Colombia
Revista de Economía Institucional
https://revistas.uexternado.edu.co/index.php/ecoins/article/view/7333
Español
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
Federico Traversa - 2021
Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0.
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
text/html
http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501
http://purl.org/redcol/resource_type/ARTREF
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
http://purl.org/coar/version/c_970fb48d4fbd8a85
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
Text
text/xml
Publication
application/pdf
Artículo de revista
B52, P48, D70
B52, P48, D70
cambio institucional, dependencia de la trayectoria, institucionalismo histórico
23
45
Núm. 45 , Año 2021 : Julio-diciembre
mudança institucional, dependência da trajetória, Institucionalismo Histórico
El institucionalismo histórico da especial importancia teórica al poder en la comprensión de las instituciones, pero cuando adopta el concepto de dependencia de la trayectoria para explicar el cambio institucional cae en un dilema teórico: la dependencia de la trayectoria es atractiva pues da de gran autonomía a la dimensión institucional, pero la aísla de la influencia de las asimetrías de poder. Las teorías posteriores del cambio endógeno y gradual intentan solucionar este problema reintroduciendo el poder, pero dan lugar a un panorama fragmentado y repleto de tensiones teóricas.
Traversa, Federico
Institutional change, path dependence, Historical Institutionalism
Journal article
Power and institutional change: From path dependence to theories of gradual change
Historical institutionalism gives special importance to power asymmetries for understanding institutions, but by adopting the concept of path dependence to explain institutional dynamics also falls into a theoretical dilemma. On the one hand path dependence becomes attractive insofar as it gives autonomy to institutional dimension, but on the other hand it isolates institutions from the influence of power asymmetries. Later theories of gradual endogenous change attempt to solve this problem by reintroducing power, but leave a fragmented panorama, full of underlying theoretical tensions for historical institutionalism.
B52, P48, D70
https://revistas.uexternado.edu.co/index.php/ecoins/article/download/7333/13265
108
https://revistas.uexternado.edu.co/index.php/ecoins/article/download/7333/13165
https://revistas.uexternado.edu.co/index.php/ecoins/article/download/7333/10058
2021-07-01
83
https://doi.org/10.18601/01245996.v23n45.05
10.18601/01245996.v23n45.05
2346-2450
2021-07-01T07:01:15Z
2021-07-01T07:01:15Z
0124-5996