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This volume collects the results from the Politecnico di Milan's
award-winning "Boa_Ma_Nha, Maputo!" research-by-design project,
which studied various transdisciplinary approaches to development
in the context of the Global South. The challenges of urbanization
are well known, but that only goes so far in aiding implementation.
From local considerations like water access and housing rights to
global issues like climate change, territorial development demands
solutions that address the needs of the specific population while
keeping such goals as sustainability and inclusion in mind. By
focusing on a number of towns within the Maputo Province of
Mozambique, and thus addressing many of the issues endemic to
Sub-Saharan Africa, the research, structurally presented so as to
aid those who may require introduction to the issue, makes a clear
case in favor of always keeping the Water-Energy-Food (WEF) Nexus
in mind when formulating development strategies for improving
people's lives, as well as the wisdom of marrying academic findings
with the insights accrued by local NGOs and institutions, thereby
expanding the potential idea bank beyond the Eurocentric status quo
that has tended to dominate the field.
This book brings together a series of innovative contributions
which provide an eclectic view of how theorizing politics plays out
in Central Asia. How are the concepts of governance, legitimacy,
ideology, power, order, and the state framed in the region? How can
we use the experiences of the Central Asian states to renovate
political theorizing? In addressing these questions, the volume
relies on the contributions of many young and local researchers,
whose chapters are primed to address three key themes: exploring
models of governance, revealing ideological justifications, and
reframing state and order. Utilizing a range of single and
comparative case studies from across the Central Asian space, this
illuminating and original volume opens up a new space for political
theorists, regional specialists and students of politics to begin
reconsidering how we approach the theorization of regions of the
world assumed to be on the periphery.
This book brings together a series of innovative contributions
which provide an eclectic view of how theorizing politics plays out
in Central Asia. How are the concepts of governance, legitimacy,
ideology, power, order, and the state framed in the region? How can
we use the experiences of the Central Asian states to renovate
political theorizing? In addressing these questions, the volume
relies on the contributions of many young and local researchers,
whose chapters are primed to address three key themes: exploring
models of governance, revealing ideological justifications, and
reframing state and order. Utilizing a range of single and
comparative case studies from across the Central Asian space, this
illuminating and original volume opens up a new space for political
theorists, regional specialists and students of politics to begin
reconsidering how we approach the theorization of regions of the
world assumed to be on the periphery.
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