Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
An ejido (Spanish pronunciation:, from Latin exitum) is an area of communal land used for agriculture in which community members have usufruct rights rather than ownership rights to land, which in Mexico is held by the Mexican state.
Secretary of Health, Mexico City, Mexico. Healthcare in Mexico is a multifaceted system comprising public institutions overseen by government departments, private hospitals and clinics, and private physicians. It is distinguished by a unique amalgamation of coverage predominantly contingent upon individuals' employment statuses.
The Secretariat of Health (Spanish: Secretaría de Salud) is the government department in charge of all social health services in Mexico, and an integral part of the Mexican health system. The Secretary of Health is a member of the Executive Cabinet and is appointed at the discretion of the President of the Republic. In recent years, the ...
Over a third of the migrants who came with the caravan to the U.S.-Mexico border are apparently suffering from a slew of health issues. According to Tijuana’s Health Department, migrants are ...
El Centenario was founded in the 1960s as an agrarian/fishing ejido by approximately 25 founding families. Each of the original families was delegated land to use for farming and on which to build a dwelling, while the land remained under the ownership of the communal ejido.
Dec. 11—Visitors to New Mexico's Human Services Department will see new signage as early as July as the state transitions the multifaceted office into what will be known as the Health Care ...
It was the Mexico's biggest ejido, [8] it had an area of 16,420 ha (164.2 km 2). Juan José Ríos is named after General Juan José Ríos, a politician and a soldier during the Mexican Revolution . Engineers who planned the urban area construction selected this name.
Through the land reforms of the early 20th century, some indigenous people had land rights under the ejido system. [63] Under ejidos, indigenous communities have usufruct rights of the land. Indigenous communities do this when they do not have the legal evidence to claim the land. In 1992, free market reforms allowed ejidos to be partitioned ...