La Paz Corporativo: 71535825 Terminal Av

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

La Paz Corporativo: 71535825 Terminal Av OFICINA DEPARTAMENTO LOCALIDAD DIRECCION TELEFONO ATT Fijo: 2-118903 El Alto Aeropuerto Aeropuerto Internacional El Alto La Paz Corporativo: 71535825 Terminal Av. Avenida Perú y Uruguay, S/N - Corporativo: 71533250 La Paz La Paz de Buses Zona Challapampa Interno: 4111 Terminal Calle Evadidos del Paraguay Nº Fijo: 2-824888 El Alto La Paz de Buses 1000 Corporativo: 71533216 Terminal Fijo: 4-550659 Cochabamba Av. Ayacucho Esq. Tarata S/N Cochabamba de Buses Interno: 4231 Aeropuerto Internacional Jorge Cochabamba Aeropuerto Fijo: 4-590657 Cochabamba Wilstermann - Av. Killman S/N Terminal Av. Rajka Bacovik entre Aroma y Av. Oruro Fijo: 5-275121 Oruro de Buses Villarroel S/N Aeropuerto Juan Mendoza- Final Av. Oruro Oruro Aeropuerto Villarroel entre Calle Huanuni y Av. Maria Barzola S/N Zona Santa Rosa Terminal de Buses Agustin Morales Terminal - Avenida Las Americas entrecalle Fijo: 6-672454 Tarija Tarija de Buses Humberto Ichazu y Calle Angel Corporativo: 17535930 Calabi Aeropuerto Capitan Oriel Lea Plaza Fijo: 6666484 Tarija Aeropuerto - Av. Jaime Paz Zamora y Calle Tarija Corporativo: 71535932 Rafael Pabón Aeropuerto de Alcantari - Municipio Sucre Aeropuerto Corporativo: 71533219 Chuquisaca de Yamparáez, a 30km de Sucre Terminal Terminal de Buses SERCIS - Avenida Fijo: 645580 Sucre Chuquisaca de Buses Ostria Gutierrez s/n Zona la Madona Corporativo: 71533207 Terminal Corporativo: 71536334 Potosi Avenida Las Banderas s/n Potosi de Buses Interno: 4601 Terminal Calle 20 de Mayo entre calle La Paz Villazon Corporativo: 71536350 Potosi de Buses y Plaza 6 de Agosto Terminal Avenida Arce Esquina Calle Perú s/n Uyuni Corporativo: 71536343 Potosi de Buses (Oficina Trans 6 de Octubre) Terminal Avenida Coronel Pedro Arraya entre Tupiza Corporativo: 71533096 Potosi de Buses calle final Suipacha Terminal Avenida Beni esquina Viador Pinto Corporativo: 71533263 Trinidad Beni de Buses S/N Interno: 4701 Fijo: 3-121686 Santa Cruz Terminal Terminal Bimodal Avenida Montes Corporativo: 71533229 Santa Cruz de la Sierra de Buses Final S/N Interno: 4331 Fijo: 3-120604 Aeropuerto Viru Viru - Carretera al Warnes Aeropuerto Corporativo: 71535792 Santa Cruz Norte Km 18 Interno: 4321.
Recommended publications
  • Races of Maize in Bolivia
    RACES OF MAIZE IN BOLIVIA Ricardo Ramírez E. David H. Timothy Efraín DÍaz B. U. J. Grant in collaboration with G. Edward Nicholson Edgar Anderson William L. Brown NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES- NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL Publication 747 Funds were provided for publication by a contract between the National Academythis of Sciences -National Research Council and The Institute of Inter-American Affairs of the International Cooperation Administration. The grant was made the of the Committee on Preservation of Indigenousfor Strainswork of Maize, under the Agricultural Board, a part of the Division of Biology and Agriculture of the National Academy of Sciences - National Research Council. RACES OF MAIZE IN BOLIVIA Ricardo Ramírez E., David H. Timothy, Efraín Díaz B., and U. J. Grant in collaboration with G. Edward Nicholson Calle, Edgar Anderson, and William L. Brown Publication 747 NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES- NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL Washington, D. C. 1960 COMMITTEE ON PRESERVATION OF INDIGENOUS STRAINS OF MAIZE OF THE AGRICULTURAL BOARD DIVISIONOF BIOLOGYAND AGRICULTURE NATIONALACADEMY OF SCIENCES- NATIONALRESEARCH COUNCIL Ralph E. Cleland, Chairman J. Allen Clark, Executive Secretary Edgar Anderson Claud L. Horn Paul C. Mangelsdorf William L. Brown Merle T. Jenkins G. H. Stringfield C. O. Erlanson George F. Sprague Other publications in this series: RACES OF MAIZE IN CUBA William H. Hatheway NAS -NRC Publication 453 I957 Price $1.50 RACES OF MAIZE IN COLOMBIA M. Roberts, U. J. Grant, Ricardo Ramírez E., L. W. H. Hatheway, and D. L. Smith in collaboration with Paul C. Mangelsdorf NAS-NRC Publication 510 1957 Price $1.50 RACES OF MAIZE IN CENTRAL AMERICA E.
    [Show full text]
  • Biosphere Reserves in the Mediterranean Region: Development of a 14
    MAB Report Seville+5 page1(EN) 18/09/01 9:47 Page 1 (Noir/Process Black film) The designations employed and the presentation of material throughout this publication do not imply the impression of any opinion on the part of UNESCO concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. The opinions expressed in this digest are those of the authors and are not necessarily those of UNESCO or the authors’ employers. Published in 2001 by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization 7, place de Fontenoy, 75352 Paris 07 SP France (SC-2001/WS/28) Previous reports in this series 1. International Co-ordinating Council of the Programme on Man and the Biosphere 34. Regional meeting on integrated ecological research and training needs in the (MAB). First session. Paris, 9–19 November, 1971. southern Asian mountain systems, particularly the Hind u Kush-Himalayas. 2. Expert panel on the role of systems analysis and modelling approaches in the Kathmandu, 26 September–2 October, 1975. Programme on Man and the Biosphere (MAB). Paris, 18–20 April, 1972. 35. Regional meeting on integrated ecological research and training needs in tropical 3. Expert panel on Project 1: Ecological effects of increasing human activities on deciduous and semi-deciduous forest ecosystems of South Asia. Varanasi, tropical and subtropical forest ecosystems. Paris, 16–18 May, 1972. 5–11 October, 1975. 4. Expert panel on Project 12: Interactions between environmental transformations 36. Regional meeting on integrated ecological research and conservation activities in and genetic and demographic changes.
    [Show full text]
  • Tarija (Bolivia) – Natural Gas Extraction
    From: Humphreys Bebbington D. PhD research proposal. SED University of Manchester. Tarija (Bolivia) – Natural Gas Extraction The Department of Tarija lies in southeast Bolivia bordering with Argentina and Paraguay. Covering an area of 37,623km 2 and with a primarily mestizo 1 population of approximately 400,000 (Census 2001), the Department is home to over 20 indigenous groups (with the Guarani being most numerous) and a growing number of migrants from the highlands. Tarija has long occupied a marginal position in Bolivia's economy and politics. However, the discovery of vast natural gas resources in the region in the late 1990s, considered to be South America's second largest gas field, is rapidly transforming the region. The extent of these natural gas reserves, coupled with a favorable legislative framework until recent years, has attracted foreign direct investment eager to extract, process, transport and market natural gas and its derivatives to energy hungry neighbors such as Brazil and Argentina, and to a lesser extent supply the domestic market with a source of cheap, clean energy. But the process of extracting and monetizing this new found wealth has been less than easy, producing frictions and conflict at the local, regional, national and continental levels. Indeed the struggle to define who owns Bolivia's hydrocarbon resources and how the rents they generate should be divided among different actors led to the 2003 Gas War and the successive departures of three presidents within two years. This period of political instability culminated in the election of social movement leader Evo Morales as President in 2006.
    [Show full text]
  • Bolivia: Floods
    Bolivia: Floods “El Niño phenomenon has resulted in heavy rainfall, particularly in several regions of www.reliefweb.int Chuquisaca, Santa Cruz, Cochabamba and northern La Paz and Beni departments of Created by ReliefWeb on 2 Feb 2007 Bolivia.” OCHA Situation Report No.3 Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs United Nations Total: SITUATION • 18,806 families affected • Agricultural and livestock sectors severely affected, (94,030 people) • 17 dead particularly in the departments of Santa Cruz, • 3 missing Cochabamba, Chuquisaca, Tarija, Potosí and La Paz. Pando • Ministry of Health declared “red alert” nationwide in order to prevent possible dengue outbreaks. 24 cases confirmed. BRAZIL ACTION • Relief assistance via the General Emergency and Aid PERU Beni Directorate. 486 families • Bolivian Government is preparing an affected Appeal to be launched next week to the international La Paz community. 2,067 families BOLIVIA affected Lago Titicaca LINKS Main roads interrupted La Paz (including Cochabamba- • OCHA Situation Report No.3 Santa Cruz section) • Latest updates for Bolivia: Floods Cochabamba 3,953 families • Related maps ______________________________________________________ affected Santa Cruz Based on OCHA Situation Report No.3, issued 1 Feb 2007 3,217 families affected GLIDE: FL-2007-000012-BOL Oruro Contact: [email protected] 14 families affected Salar de Chuquisaca INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY Uyuni 4,219 families Provincial Boundary Potosi affected Major Road Tarija and Santa Cruz CHILE 2,830 families Tarija National Capital Some communities affected 2,020 families affected remain isolated Affected Department by hail Affected Department PARAGUAY 0 150 300 Kilometers Map data sources: UNCS, SALB, DevInfo. ARGENTINA The names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations ..
    [Show full text]
  • Anatomy of a Regional Conflict: Tarija and Resource Grievances in Morales
    Anatomy of a regional conflict: Tarija and resource grievances in Morales’ Bolivia Denise Humphreys Bebbington School of Environment and Development Room 1.54, Humanities Bridgeford Street University of Manchester Oxford Road Manchester, M13 9PL UK [email protected] Tel 44-1457-869813 Anthony Bebbington School of Environment and Development Room 1.54, Humanities Bridgeford Street University of Manchester Oxford Road Manchester, M13 9PL UK [email protected] Tel: 44-161-2750422 Forthcoming in Latin American Perspectives , 2010 Abstract: In 2008, the Department of Tarija became the epicenter of national political struggles over political autonomy for lowland regions at odds with the Morales administration. In September, following a series of regional referenda on autonomy and a national recall election, citizen committees in Tarija mobilized urban-based sectors and organized a general strike to oppose central government. This paper analyzes this mobilization and argues that it is unhelpful to understand the strike as simply an act of political sabotage orchestrated by racist, regional elites. The factors driving protest and interest in autonomy are varied and deeply related to patterns of hydrocarbon extraction in the department that have allowed for the mobilization of grievance and cultivation of resource regionalism at departmental and intra-departmental scales. Theoretically it suggests that alongside class and ethnicity, identities of place and region can be equally important in processes of mobilization,
    [Show full text]
  • Geographical Constraints to Growth in Bolivia
    A Service of Leibniz-Informationszentrum econstor Wirtschaft Leibniz Information Centre Make Your Publications Visible. zbw for Economics Andersen, Lykke E.; Nina, Osvaldo Working Paper Geographical Constraints to Growth in Bolivia Development Research Working Paper Series, No. 05/2007 Provided in Cooperation with: Institute for Advanced Development Studies (INESAD), La Paz Suggested Citation: Andersen, Lykke E.; Nina, Osvaldo (2007) : Geographical Constraints to Growth in Bolivia, Development Research Working Paper Series, No. 05/2007, Institute for Advanced Development Studies (INESAD), La Paz This Version is available at: http://hdl.handle.net/10419/189540 Standard-Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Die Dokumente auf EconStor dürfen zu eigenen wissenschaftlichen Documents in EconStor may be saved and copied for your Zwecken und zum Privatgebrauch gespeichert und kopiert werden. personal and scholarly purposes. Sie dürfen die Dokumente nicht für öffentliche oder kommerzielle You are not to copy documents for public or commercial Zwecke vervielfältigen, öffentlich ausstellen, öffentlich zugänglich purposes, to exhibit the documents publicly, to make them machen, vertreiben oder anderweitig nutzen. publicly available on the internet, or to distribute or otherwise use the documents in public. Sofern die Verfasser die Dokumente unter Open-Content-Lizenzen (insbesondere CC-Lizenzen) zur Verfügung gestellt haben sollten, If the documents have been made available under an Open gelten abweichend von diesen Nutzungsbedingungen die in der dort Content Licence (especially Creative Commons Licences), you genannten Lizenz gewährten Nutzungsrechte. may exercise further usage rights as specified in the indicated licence. www.econstor.eu Institute for Advanced Development Studies Development Research Working Paper Series No. 5/2007 Geographical Constraints to Growth in Bolivia by: Lykke E.
    [Show full text]
  • Holdridge Life Zone Map: Republic of Argentina María R
    United States Department of Agriculture Holdridge Life Zone Map: Republic of Argentina María R. Derguy, Jorge L. Frangi, Andrea A. Drozd, Marcelo F. Arturi, and Sebastián Martinuzzi Forest International Institute General Technical November Service of Tropical Forestry Report IITF-GTR-51 2019 In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, the USDA, its Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital status, family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA (not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and complaint filing deadlines vary by program or incident. Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of communication for program information (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.) should contact the responsible Agency or USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TTY) or contact USDA through the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339. Additionally, program information may be made available in languages other than English. To file a program discrimination complaint, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form, AD-3027, found online at http://www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_cust.html and at any USDA office or write a letter addressed to USDA and provide in the letter all of the information requested in the form.
    [Show full text]
  • Protección Y Rehabilitación Ambiental En La Cuenca Binacional Del Río Bermejo Protección Y Rehabilitación Ambiental En La Cuenca Binacional Del Río Bermejo
    Protección y Rehabilitación Ambiental en la Cuenca Binacional del Río Bermejo Protección y Rehabilitación Ambiental en la Cuenca Binacional del Río Bermejo. 1a ed. - Buenos Aires. COBINABE, 2010. 125 p. ; 27x22 cm. ISBN 978-987-25793-5-7 1. Recursos Naturales. 2. Recursos Hídricos. 3. Desarrollo Sustentable. CDD 333.91 Fecha de catalogación: 16/04/2010 PEA BERMEJO PROGRAMA ESTRATÉGICO DE ACCIÓN PARA LA CUENCA BINACIONAL DEL RÍO BERMEJO Protección y Rehabilitación Ambiental en la Cuenca Binacional del Río Bermejo aRgeNTINa BOLIVIA Comisión Binacional para el Desarrollo de la Alta Cuenca del Río Bermejo Y el Río Grande de Tarija COBINABE fmam - gef PNUMA - UNeP oea - OAS FONDO PARA PROGRAMA DE LAS ORGANIZACIÓN EL MEDIO AMBIENTE NACIONES UNIDAS PARA DE LOS ESTADOS MUNDIAL EL MEDIO AMBIENTE AMERICANOS Sumario PReseNTacIóN .......................................................................................................... 11 PreFacio .................................................................................................................. 13 ResUmeN ejecutivo ................................................................................................. 17 executive SummaRy ................................................................................................ 27 1. IntrodUccIóN ...................................................................................................... 37 2. PRocesos de degRadacIóN ambIental eN la CueNca del Río beRmejo y estraTegIa de accIoN ............................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • ANNUAL REPORT Contents MISSION
    20 17 ANNUAL REPORT Contents MISSION Eyes of the world seeks to provide quality eye care to visually impaired people living in po- 3 Introductions verty in the developing world, through their local health services. We also wish to create the conditions necessary for reducing the incidence of eye disease in those countries. 4 The Team In addition, we aim to raise awareness in our own society about the lack of basic health care 6 2017 in Figures provision in the areas in which the project is run. 7 Life Stories 8 Significant Initiatives VISION Eyes of the world aspires to a world in which no one suffers from avoidable blindness and to 10 Eyes of the Sahara contribute, therefore, to making the right to sight a reality. 12 Eyes of Mozambique 14 Eyes of Bolivia PRINCIPLES AND STRATEGY 16 Eyes of Mali Basic principles Strategy Humanity Permanency 18 Making our Work Independence Development Visible Gender equality and Cooperation Non-discrimination Efficiency 21 Our Finances Altruism Professionalism 22 Our Partners and Transparency Supporters Eyes of the world is a private foundation based in Barcelona created on July 9, 2001 and registered on the: · Foundations’ Register of the Generalitat de Catalunya with the number 1568 on July 18, 2001. · Non-Governmental Organisations for Development Register, part of the Spanish Agency of International Cooperation (AECID, in Spanish) on May 10, 2004. · Non-Governmental Organisations for Development Register of the Generalitat de Catalunya International Cooperation Affairs Secretariat with the number 29 on June 19, 2005. · Basque Country Foundations Register on July 19, 2005.
    [Show full text]
  • The Bolivian Chaco: from Paleoindian to the Late Ceramic Period
    FOLIA HISTORICA Nº 22, Resistencia, Chaco, diciembre 2014 DEL NORDESTE IIGHI - IH- CONICET/UNNE - pp. 147-168 EL CHACO BOLIVIANO: DEL PALEOINDIO AL PERÍODO ALFARERO TARDÍO The Bolivian Chaco: From Paleoindian to the Late Ceramic Period Jorge A. Arellano* Resumen El Chaco de Bolivia, que forma parte del Gran Chaco Sudamericano, tuvo en el pasado prehispánico un rol importante en las tierras bajas por su carácter de frontera natural entre dos ecosistemas y cuencas importantes: amazónica y chaqueña. A pesar de la información etnohistórica y etnográfica, esta zona marginal fue relegada en las investigaciones arqueológicas. En este artículo, integrando datos paleoambientales y arqueológicos, se presenta un nuevo análisis de la evolución del proceso cultural en el Chaco marginal, desde el paleoindio hasta el período alfarero tardío. En este sentido, se sugiere que cada evento ambiental importante está traducido en la adopción de diferentes sistemas y modos de vida en las poblaciones prehispánicas. <Bolivia Chaco Marginal> <Paleoambiente> <Paleoindio> <Período Alfarero> Abstract The Bolivian Chaco, northern marginal zone of the Great South American Chaco, had an important role during the pre-Hispanic periods because of its character of natural boundary between two main ecosystems and basins: Amazon and Chaco. Despite the ethnohistorical and ethnographic data, this marginal zone was relegated from the archaeological research. In this article, paleoenvironmental and archaeological data are integrated to analyze the process of cultural evolution in the Bolivian Chaco, from the paleoindian period to the late ceramic period. It is suggested that every major paleoenviromental event was reflected in the adoption of different systems and ways of life by the pre-Hispanic populations.
    [Show full text]
  • Notes on the Avifauna of the Upper Bermejo River (Argentina and Bolivia) with a Ne W Species for Argentina
    Notes on the avifauna of the upper Bermejo River (Argentina and Bolivia) with a ne w species for Argentina Rosendo M. Fraga and Ricardo Clark C o tin g a 12 ( 1 9 9 9 ) : 7 7 – 7 8 Durante un relevamiento invernal de cinco días por el alto valle del río Bermejo (Argentina y Bolivia), detectamos 140 especies de aves. Entre ellas, registramos por primera vez en la Argentina a Buteo albonotatus, y por segunda vez a Egretta caerulea. Presentamos aquí datos sobre el estatus e historia natural de 12 especies de aves. The Bermejo River is the one of the main tributaries Little Blue Heron Egretta caerulea of the Paraguay–Paraná River system, and flows Two juveniles, recognised by their bicoloured bills from south-west Bolivia to north-east Argentina, and greenish legs, and an adult were at the junction through varied habitats from the Andean chain to of the Bermejo and Tarija rivers (Juntas de San the plains of the lower Chaco. It is the most Antonio: 22°51'S 64°20'W) on the Bolivian / important river crossing the dry western Chaco. Argentinian border, on 21 July 1998. They During more humid times, the Bermejo River associated with a flock of Snowy Egret Egretta possibly acted as a corridor for forest birds between thula, and foraged for fish on the rocky beaches of the (interior) Atlantic Forest and the Yungas the river. This is the second record in Argentina, (montane) Forests of north-west Argentina and and the first record for Salta Province (and south Bolivia11.
    [Show full text]
  • Gas Y Desarrollo: Dinámica Territorial Rural En Tarija, Bolivia
    SERIE DOCUMENTOS DE TRABAJO Documento Nº 172 Grupo de Trabajo Cohesión Territorial para el Desarrollo Gas y Desarrollo: Dinámica Territorial Rural en Tarija, Bolivia Leonith Hinojosa, Anthony Bebbington, Guido Cortez, Juan Pablo Chumacero, Denise Humphreys Bebbington y Karl Hennermann Octubre, 2015 Este documento es una traducción de: Hinojosa, L.; Bebbington, A.; Cortez, G.; Chumacero, J.P.; Bebbington, D.H. & Hennermann, K. 2015. Gas and Development: Rural Territorial Dynamics in Tarija, Bolivia. World Development, Volume 73, September 2015, Pages 105-117. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2014.12.016 El presente documento es el resultado del Programa Cohesión Territorial para el Desarrollo coordinado por Rimisp – Centro Latinoamericano para el Desarrollo Rural e implementado con socios de ochos países de la región, con financiamiento del international Development Research Centre (IDRC, Canadá). Cita: Hinojosa, L.; Bebbington, A.; Cortez, G.; Chumacero, J.P.; Bebbington, D.H.; Hennermann, K., 2015. Gas y Desarrollo: Dinámica Territorial Rural en Tarija, Bolivia. Serie documento de trabajo N°172. Grupo de trabajo Cohesión Territorial para el Desarrollo. Programa Cohesión Territorial para el Desarrollo. Rimisp, Santiago, Chile. Autores: Leonith Hinojosa, Université Catholique de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Bélgica. Anthony Bebbington, Clark University, EE.UU. Guido Cortez, Centro de Estudios Regionales para el Desarrollo de Tarija, Bolivia. Juan Pablo Chumacero, Fundación Tierra, La Paz, Bolivia. Denise Humphreys Bebbington, Clark University, Worcester, USA. Karl Hennermann, University of Manchester, UK Este es un documento de acceso abierto, publicado bajo la licencia de Creative Commons CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/). Rimisp in Latin America (www.rimisp.org) Chile: Huelén 10, Piso 6, Providencia, Santiago, Región Metropolitana | Tel.
    [Show full text]