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This book explores how conflicts around access to water shape
cities, citizenship and infrastructures by tracing how water is
commodified and controlled by the Public Enterprises of Medellin
(EPM), one of the most successful publicly owned utility companies
in the global South. Why are water inequalities dramatically
increasing in Medellin, a city that is located in an area of
bountiful water resources and owns a successful, established
utility company? This book explains this paradoxical situation by
weaving together two central threads. The first is a critical
historical analysis of the political, economic and ecological
conditions that enabled the city's utility company to grow and
expand internationally, and the second is a rich account of the
everyday practices and struggles of residents in low-income areas
to secure access to water and demand citizenship rights. The EPM is
a case of global significance as the company continues to expand
its commercial operations in the Latin American services market by
taking over the utilities in Panama, El Salvador and Guatemala,
Mexico and Chile. Although its successful international expansion
has been a source of pride and admiration for many Colombians, the
implementation of market-oriented operating principles in all
activities of the utility company raises important and complex
questions about its public character and responsibility in the
provision of basic services, which has much wider implications
given how it is poised to be a model for other for-profit municipal
service operations in other Latin American countries. This book
advances the empirical knowledge of corporatized utilities, with a
globally significant case, as well as providing new theoretical
insights with which to understand the limits, challenges and
opportunities faced by public utility companies to provide
affordable and equal access to water in cities. This book will be
of great interest to students and scholars of water resource
management, corporatization, privatisation and commodification of
natural resources, urban studies, citizenship and human rights,
environmental sociology and Latin American studies.
Global climate governance has presented problems that have led to
failures, yet it has also opened the door to new transregional
governance schemes, especially in North America. This book
introduces an environmental dimension into the concept of
governance. Almost fifteen years after the climate global
governance concept emerged, results worldwide have not been as
favorable as expected. This book details previous discussions about
the concept of global climate governance and its limits. It
highlights how the Kyoto Protocol has a limited design taking into
account a national approach to global, regional, and transnational
problems, had no obligatory mechanisms for implementation and
explains the emergence of new polluters not committed under it such
as China and India. Furthermore this book explores other levels of
authority such as regional institutions - the North American
agreement on trade (NAFTA) and on environment (NAAEC), as well as
the regional energy working group (NAEWG). The author puts forward
a theoretical proposal for re-territorialization and coordination
of policies for climate change into new forms of articulating
interests in what she terms transnational green economic regions
(TGERs) and tests this on two case studies - the Regional
Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) and the Western Climate Initiative
(WCI). This study presents the challenges and opportunities of a
transregional approach in North America.
Global climate governance has presented problems that have led to
failures, yet it has also opened the door to new transregional
governance schemes, especially in North America. This book
introduces an environmental dimension into the concept of
governance. Almost fifteen years after the climate global
governance concept emerged, results worldwide have not been as
favorable as expected. This book details previous discussions about
the concept of global climate governance and its limits. It
highlights how the Kyoto Protocol has a limited design taking into
account a national approach to global, regional, and transnational
problems, had no obligatory mechanisms for implementation and
explains the emergence of new polluters not committed under it such
as China and India. Furthermore this book explores other levels of
authority such as regional institutions - the North American
agreement on trade (NAFTA) and on environment (NAAEC), as well as
the regional energy working group (NAEWG). The author puts forward
a theoretical proposal for re-territorialization and coordination
of policies for climate change into new forms of articulating
interests in what she terms transnational green economic regions
(TGERs) and tests this on two case studies - the Regional
Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) and the Western Climate Initiative
(WCI). This study presents the challenges and opportunities of a
transregional approach in North America.
This comprehensive analysis of key issues in North American
environmental policy provides an overview of how the US, Mexico,
and Canada differ in their environmental management approaches and
capacity levels, and how these differences play into cross-border
cooperation on environmental problems. The book offers insights
into transboundary cooperation both before and after NAFTA, and
presents a framework for making environmental interaction more
effective in the future.
The book is organized into two parts. The first, more general,
section compares the national contexts for environmental management
in each country--including economic conditions, sociocultural
dynamics, and political decision-making frameworks-- and shows how
these have led to variations in policy approaches and levels of
capacity. The authors argue that effective environmental governance
in North America depends on the ability of transboundary
institutions to address and mediate these differences. The book's
second section illustrates this argument, using four case studies
of environmental management in North America: biodiversity and
protected areas, air pollution (smog); greenhouse gas reduction,
and genetically modified crops.
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Dance for Me When I Die (Paperback)
Cristian Alarcon; Translated by Nick Caistor, Marcela Lopez-Levy
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R590
R518
Discovery Miles 5 180
Save R72 (12%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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On the morning of February 6, 1999, Buenos Aires police officers
shot and killed seventeen-year-old Victor Manuel Vital, better
known as Frente, while he was unarmed, hiding under a table, and
trying to surrender. Widely known and respected throughout Buenos
Aires's shantytowns for his success as a thief, commitment to a
code of honor, and generosity to his community, Frente became a
Robin Hood--style legend who, in death, was believed to have the
power to make bullets swerve and save gang members from shrapnel.
In Dance for Me When I Die-first published in Argentina in 2004 and
appearing here in English for the first time-Cristian Alarcon tells
the story and legacy of Frente's life and death in the context of
the everyday experiences of love and survival, murder and
addiction, and crime and courage of those living in the slums.
Drawing on interviews with Frente's friends, family, and
ex-girlfriends, as well as with local thieves and drug dealers, and
having immersed himself in Frente's neighborhood for eighteen
months, Alarcon captures the world of the urban poor in all of its
complexity and humanity.
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Dance for Me When I Die (Hardcover)
Cristian Alarcon; Translated by Nick Caistor, Marcela Lopez-Levy
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R2,083
R1,952
Discovery Miles 19 520
Save R131 (6%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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On the morning of February 6, 1999, Buenos Aires police officers
shot and killed seventeen-year-old Victor Manuel Vital, better
known as Frente, while he was unarmed, hiding under a table, and
trying to surrender. Widely known and respected throughout Buenos
Aires's shantytowns for his success as a thief, commitment to a
code of honor, and generosity to his community, Frente became a
Robin Hood--style legend who, in death, was believed to have the
power to make bullets swerve and save gang members from shrapnel.
In Dance for Me When I Die-first published in Argentina in 2004 and
appearing here in English for the first time-Cristian Alarcon tells
the story and legacy of Frente's life and death in the context of
the everyday experiences of love and survival, murder and
addiction, and crime and courage of those living in the slums.
Drawing on interviews with Frente's friends, family, and
ex-girlfriends, as well as with local thieves and drug dealers, and
having immersed himself in Frente's neighborhood for eighteen
months, Alarcon captures the world of the urban poor in all of its
complexity and humanity.
|
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