Cancún, Quintana Roo – The National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) in Quintana Roo has launched the digital version of its scientific dissemination journal, “Redes de la Costa Oriental,” presenting its first issue in December.
The publication’s main goal is to disseminate the results of academic research and the work of cultural promoters. According to Margarito Molina Rendón, regional director of INAH, the journal will address findings obtained from research and reflections on the territory, including testimonies from the Maya people, both past and present, through primary sources, material remains, and ethnographic studies.
“Redes de la Costa Oriental” will not be limited to topics about the indigenous people but will also include research on new urban identities and social phenomena such as migration. The objective is for the journal to serve as a platform for works from other regions of Mexico and the world, functioning as a window to diverse realities.
The first issue, corresponding to the second semester of the year, contains 17 academic texts distributed across six sections: Manglares, Sextante, Latitudes, Huracán, Bitácora, and Oleajes, in addition to an introductory editorial.
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