miércoles, 19 de mayo de 2010
Currículum Vitae
Marianela Solano Quirós
Paraíso, Cartago
8899-9262
nemosolqui@hotmail.com
CALIFICACIONES
Estudios de Enseñanza y traducción de inglés, en ULACIT.
Estudios en Administración de Empresas en la UNED. Primer año.
Ingles nivel intermedio obtenido en el Centro Cultural Costarricense Norteamericano.
Conocimientos extensivos de computación en ambientes Excel, MS Word, Power Point y HTML (Mozilla y Explorer)
Alta capacidad en el servicio al cliente obtenida al desempeñar diferentes cargos en atención al público.
Vasta experiencia en solución de problemas en el área de atención al público.
Gran habilidad de trabajo en equipo con diferentes tipos de personas.
Espíritu trabajador y constante, cualidades de liderazgo y responsabilidad.
EDUCACION
Estudiante actual en Enseñanza y Traducción de Ingles, ULACIT.
Estudios de Administración de Empresas en la Universidad Estatal a Distancia (UNED) Primer año. 2009
Entrenamiento Servicio al Cliente en Mc Donalds 2008
Nivel de Ingles Intermedio obtenido en el Centro Cultural Costarricense Norteamericano 2007
Bachiller en Educación Media. 2008
EXPERIENCIA LABORAL
Atención al Público, y dependiente en joyería “Oro Sólido”.
Trabajo de temporada 2005-2006
Niñera 2007
Asistente profesional y personal en consultorio psicológico 2007-2008
Colaboradora de Mc Café (Mc Donald`s), realizando
funciones de Atención al Cliente, Cajera, barista,
salonera, entre otras. 2008-2009
Bibliografía anotada EBSCO
Gaza Conflict.
Called Operation Cast Lead by Israel Defense Forces (IDF), was a military offensive from the air, land and sea, preceded by a campaign of aerial bombing on the Gaza Strip (coastal region in the Middle East, Palestinian Territories ), which started on December 27, 2008 and ending January 18, 2009. It was directed against targets in the infrastructure of the Islamic organization Hamas, mainly ports, ministerial offices, police stations, weapons depots and underground tunnels connecting the Gaza Strip with Egypt. The conflict was described as the "Slaughter of Gaza" in much of the world.
The south of Israel is being hit by rockets fired from Gaza by Palestinian organizations, which have intensified since the beginning of the offensive.
Israeli sources reported that the purpose of this attack was to destroy "terrorist infrastructure" and the military capabilities of Hamas, in response to rocket and mortar shells against Israeli civilian targets by Palestinian militants: since the end of the high fire until the start of the offensive, more than 200 rockets hit Israel.
“According to the author, Carter commends the nurses for their dedication and value and sends a message of support. It also reports Gaza hospital conditions as described by the World Health Organization and Great Britain's financial response to the situation.”
“The authors discuss the importance of dealing with internal spiritual conflicts, especially those of children. The situation in Gaza is used as an example of the importance of teaching the next generation that revenge is wrong. The authors state that spirituality gets lost in history, which tends to focus on broad events as opposed to individual stories, and suggest that this has a negative impact on the importance of spirituality.”
“War against Gaza of December 2008–January 2009 marked a historical crossroad in the annals of the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians. The article examines four arguments: first, the war as a test for the Israeli post-Oslo strategy: Israel believed that the Palestinian Bantustans should behave as ‘protectorate regimes’, otherwise they would be under massive Israeli attack. Second, the war as the second ‘open confrontation’ that was a result of Israel's loss of its historical military deterrence. Third, some of the Arab states, including the ‘protectorate regime’ in Ramallah are part of the Israeli (and American) alliance against what is considered as the ‘rejectionist regimes’. Forth, the war in Gaza is the formal beginning of the end of the PLO as the ‘sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people’.”
“By concluding that, in its assault on Gaza under the rubric of self-defense, Israel had targeted the civilian infrastructure and consciously "punished" the civilian population and demonstrated indifference to the suffering of noncombatants and engaged in other acts in violation of the laws of war, behaviors that possibly constituted in their totality crimes against humanity, the Goldstone Report became almost as controversial as the events precipitating it. In this agora, four eminent international lawyers, a mix of scholars and practitioners, assess from their distinctive perspectives the report's methodology, its compliance with fact-finding norms, and the overall quality of its effort to apply norms of international law to a bloody event in the ongoing multidecade conflict between Jews and Arabs over the governance and division of the former British-controlled Palestinian Mandate. Dialectically, they help to structure future debates over UNsponsored fact-finding and also the normative parameters of the use of force by powerful states engaged in asymmetrical conflict.”
Bibliography
• Erricker, C., & Erricker, J. (2009). Eyeless in Gaza: reflections on conflict. International Journal of Children's Spirituality, 14(2), 89-91. doi:10.1080/13644360902830119.
• (2009). Staff on Gaza conflict front line commended. Nursing Standard, 23(20), 8. Retrieved from Academic Search Elite database.
• Ghanem, A. (2009). The Fallout from Israel's War on Gaza: A Turning Point in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict?. Holy Land Studies: A Multidisciplinary Journal (Edinburgh University Press), 8(2), 195-210. doi:10.3366/E1474947509000547.
• Farer, T. (2010). The Goldstone Report on the Gaza Conflict: An Agora. Global Governance, 16(2), 139-143. Retrieved from Academic Search Elite database.
Called Operation Cast Lead by Israel Defense Forces (IDF), was a military offensive from the air, land and sea, preceded by a campaign of aerial bombing on the Gaza Strip (coastal region in the Middle East, Palestinian Territories ), which started on December 27, 2008 and ending January 18, 2009. It was directed against targets in the infrastructure of the Islamic organization Hamas, mainly ports, ministerial offices, police stations, weapons depots and underground tunnels connecting the Gaza Strip with Egypt. The conflict was described as the "Slaughter of Gaza" in much of the world.
The south of Israel is being hit by rockets fired from Gaza by Palestinian organizations, which have intensified since the beginning of the offensive.
Israeli sources reported that the purpose of this attack was to destroy "terrorist infrastructure" and the military capabilities of Hamas, in response to rocket and mortar shells against Israeli civilian targets by Palestinian militants: since the end of the high fire until the start of the offensive, more than 200 rockets hit Israel.
“According to the author, Carter commends the nurses for their dedication and value and sends a message of support. It also reports Gaza hospital conditions as described by the World Health Organization and Great Britain's financial response to the situation.”
“The authors discuss the importance of dealing with internal spiritual conflicts, especially those of children. The situation in Gaza is used as an example of the importance of teaching the next generation that revenge is wrong. The authors state that spirituality gets lost in history, which tends to focus on broad events as opposed to individual stories, and suggest that this has a negative impact on the importance of spirituality.”
“War against Gaza of December 2008–January 2009 marked a historical crossroad in the annals of the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians. The article examines four arguments: first, the war as a test for the Israeli post-Oslo strategy: Israel believed that the Palestinian Bantustans should behave as ‘protectorate regimes’, otherwise they would be under massive Israeli attack. Second, the war as the second ‘open confrontation’ that was a result of Israel's loss of its historical military deterrence. Third, some of the Arab states, including the ‘protectorate regime’ in Ramallah are part of the Israeli (and American) alliance against what is considered as the ‘rejectionist regimes’. Forth, the war in Gaza is the formal beginning of the end of the PLO as the ‘sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people’.”
“By concluding that, in its assault on Gaza under the rubric of self-defense, Israel had targeted the civilian infrastructure and consciously "punished" the civilian population and demonstrated indifference to the suffering of noncombatants and engaged in other acts in violation of the laws of war, behaviors that possibly constituted in their totality crimes against humanity, the Goldstone Report became almost as controversial as the events precipitating it. In this agora, four eminent international lawyers, a mix of scholars and practitioners, assess from their distinctive perspectives the report's methodology, its compliance with fact-finding norms, and the overall quality of its effort to apply norms of international law to a bloody event in the ongoing multidecade conflict between Jews and Arabs over the governance and division of the former British-controlled Palestinian Mandate. Dialectically, they help to structure future debates over UNsponsored fact-finding and also the normative parameters of the use of force by powerful states engaged in asymmetrical conflict.”
Bibliography
• Erricker, C., & Erricker, J. (2009). Eyeless in Gaza: reflections on conflict. International Journal of Children's Spirituality, 14(2), 89-91. doi:10.1080/13644360902830119.
• (2009). Staff on Gaza conflict front line commended. Nursing Standard, 23(20), 8. Retrieved from Academic Search Elite database.
• Ghanem, A. (2009). The Fallout from Israel's War on Gaza: A Turning Point in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict?. Holy Land Studies: A Multidisciplinary Journal (Edinburgh University Press), 8(2), 195-210. doi:10.3366/E1474947509000547.
• Farer, T. (2010). The Goldstone Report on the Gaza Conflict: An Agora. Global Governance, 16(2), 139-143. Retrieved from Academic Search Elite database.
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