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Latin America Thesis Repositories · Scope Scape
Latin American thesis repositories aggregate the doctoral and master's research output of universities across South America, Central America, the Caribbean, and Mexico — a corpus that has grown substantially through the 2000s-2020s as Latin American higher education has expanded and digital-thesis-deposition has progressively replaced print submission. The regional landscape has structural distinctness through the dominant role of public universities (the largest universities in most Latin American countries are publicly-funded with substantial open-access traditions) plus the substantial post-2000 emergence of regional research-and-publication infrastructure through SciELO (Scientific Electronic Library Online).\n\nThe major national thesis-repository systems: Brazil (the largest Latin American academic ecosystem, with the Brazilian Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations BDTD aggregating 700,000+ Brazilian theses from 100+ universities, plus the broader CAPES and Scielo Brasil infrastructure; major university repositories at Universidade de São Paulo USP, UFRJ Rio de Janeiro, Unicamp Campinas, UnB Brasília, UFMG Belo Horizonte), Mexico (the substantial UNAM university-repository plus the broader Mexican university-repositories network through the Red Mexicana de Repositorios Institucionales REMERI; UNAM's Tesis y Disertaciones Académicas covers 350,000+ Mexican theses), Argentina (the SEDICI institutional repository at Universidad Nacional de La Plata plus the broader Argentine university-repositories network), Chile (the major Chilean university repositories at Universidad de Chile, Pontificia Universidad Católica), Colombia (the substantial Colombian university-repositories network through the Sistema Nacional de Repositorios), Peru (the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos repositories), the Caribbean university-repositories at the University of the West Indies plus the Caribbean Knowledge and Learning Network. The regional aggregator LA Referencia provides cross-Latin-American thesis-and-research-output discovery covering 9+ Latin American countries.\n\nThe regional academic-output volume has grown substantially — Brazil alone produces ~25,000 doctoral graduations annually as of 2024, the largest in Latin America; Mexico ~7,000; Argentina ~3,500; Chile ~2,500; Colombia ~2,000. The substantial post-2010 expansion of Latin American open-access research-publishing through SciELO (the regional open-access journal aggregator covering 1,500+ Latin American open-access journals) plus the Redalyc aggregator (with 1,300+ Latin American social-sciences-and-humanities journals) provides substantial broader research-output context.\n\nThe substantial Latin American-and-Spanish-and-Portuguese-language academic publishing tradition operates partially-separately from English-language Anglo-American academic publishing, with substantial intra-Latin-American research-collaboration and citation-patterns. The post-2010 substantial expansion of cross-Latin-American research-collaboration plus the expanded Latin-American-research participation in international journals (especially in physics, biology, climate science, agronomy) has driven citation flows across language regions.\n\nIndia's engagement with Latin American thesis-and-research infrastructure has deepened through the India-Brazil-South Africa IBSA Forum framework, the India-Mexico bilateral cooperation, and the broader India-Latin America-and-Caribbean trade-and-research engagement. The substantial post-2014 ITEC scholarship engagement with Latin American countries supports student-and-researcher mobility.\n\nFor a globally-mobile researcher, Latin American thesis-and-research discovery has improved substantially through the post-2010 regional aggregator infrastructure plus the substantial open-access culture in Latin American research-publishing.\n\nCross-references: thesis-root-latam intersects with thesis-root-aggregators, journal-root-archives, work-root-career-paths, the broader academy-roots infrastructure.
Scope lenses covering Latin America Thesis Repositories. Each scope drives its own pulse stream, briefs, and OPML feed.
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Scope: TradeTrade scope — tariffs, FTAs, supply chains, trade disputes, sanctions.
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Scope: Supply ChainResilience, nearshoring, friendshoring, just-in-case vs just-in-time, bullwhip mitigation.
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Scope: ClimateClimate and environmental scope — transition policy, carbon markets, physical risks.
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Scope: ESGESG disclosure rules — CSRD, SEC climate, TCFD, ISSB, greenwashing enforcement.
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Scope: InfrastructureInfrastructure scope — transit, ports, airports, power, water, digital infrastructure investment.
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