02491 am 22005653u 450 991013688590332120221206104031.02-8218-9578-X(CKB)3710000000729606(OCoLC)982228961(FrMaCLE)OB-ariadnaediciones-411(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/35878(PPN)220897964(EXLCZ)99371000000072960620180319h20072007 uy 0spaurmn#nnn|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrier¿Qué hacer con los pobres? elites y sectores populares en Santiago de Chile 1840-1895 /Luis Alberto RomeroAriadna Ediciones2007Santiago, Chile :Ariadna Ediciones,2007.©20071 online resource (267 pages) digital, PDF file(s)Open Access e-BooksKnowledge UnlatchedPrint version: 9568416080 Includes bibliographical references.Study on the phenomenon of the poor and poverty in Santiago city in the 19th century, and the reaction of the political and economic elite.What to do with the poor? is the provocative title of this book that is published for the first time in Chile. This was also the question posed by the Santiago elite (and Chilean in general) during much of the nineteenth century, a question that still retains all its relevance. The suggestive explanation of Luis Alberto Romero for the complex path of mentalities, images and representations of the other, opens new perspectives for the social history of Chile ...Social classesChileSantiagoHistory19th centuryElite (Social sciences)ChileSantiagoAttitudesHistory19th centuryPoorChileSantiagoSocial conditionsSantiago (Chile)Social conditionssubaltern class19th centurysocial historyelitesSocial classesHistoryElite (Social sciences)AttitudesHistoryPoorSocial conditions.305.50983315Romero Luis Alberto171082AuAdUSAUkMaJRUBOOK9910136885903321¿Qué hacer con los pobres2179962UNINA01764nam0 22003611i 450 UON0039269120231205104620.9749-247-8710-8v. 4978-49-03-05842-9v. 520110518g1941 |0itac50 baengMULJP||||b |||||Catalogue of the rare books of the Tenri central libraryTenri Toshokan kisho mokurokuNara-ken TanbaichiThe Tenri Central Library1941- v.ill.27 cmPosseduti: v. 3-4: Yosho no bu; v. 5: Wa-kansho no bu.13, 16, 22, 41, 46UON00066951v. 5IT-UONSI GENCI/046 (5)001UON000669512001 Tenri Toshokan sosho 13, 16, 22, 41, 46UON00392702Tenri Toshokan kisho mokurokuTenri ToshokanCataloghiUONC078250FIJPTenriUONL000228GEN C IGENERALE - CATALOGHIATenri ToshokanTenriUONV077590705487Tenri Central LibraryUONV248258650ITSOL20240220RICAUON00392691SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI GEN C I 046 (3) SI YAM11 7 046 (3) BuonoSIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI GEN C I 046 (4) SI SA 67520 7 046 (4) BuonoSIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI GEN C I 046 (5) SI SA 40703 7 046 (5) v. 5BuonoCatalogue of the rare books of the Tenri central library1351008UNIOR02757nam 2200445z- 450 991034675150332120210211(CKB)4920000000094199(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/54426(oapen)doab54426(EXLCZ)99492000000009419920202102d2018 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Neonatal Immune System: A Unique Host-Microbial InterfaceFrontiers Media SA20181 online resource (175 p.)Frontiers Research Topics2-88945-403-7 Emerging from the protective environment of the uterus, the newborn is exposed to a myriad of microbes, and quickly establishes a complex microbiome that shapes the infant's biology in ways that are only now beginning to come to light. Among these exposures are a number of potential pathogens. The host responses to these pathogens in the neonatal period are unique, reflecting a developing immune system even with delivery at term. Preterm infants are delivered at a time when host defense mechanisms are even less developed and therefore face additional risk. As such, the organisms that cause disease in this period are different from the pathogens that are common in other age groups, or the disease they cause manifests in more severe fashion. Developmental alterations in both innate and adaptive immune responses in neonates have been documented among many cell types and pathways over the last several decades. Contemporary insights into the human immune system and methodologies that allow an "omics" approach to these questions have continued to provide new information regarding the mechanisms that underlie the human neonate as an "immunocompromised host." This Research Topic highlights studies related to this unique host-pathogen interface. Contributions include those related to the innate or adaptive immune system of neonates, their response to microbial colonization or infection, and/or the pathogenesis of microbes causing disease in neonates.Neonatal Immune SystemMedicine and NursingbicsscCandidaImmunityInfectionMicrobiomeNecrotizing enterocolitisNeonateSepsisVaccineMedicine and NursingJoseph M. Blissauth1324761James L. WynnauthBOOK9910346751503321The Neonatal Immune System: A Unique Host-Microbial Interface3036263UNINA