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This book presents case studies that share important experiences
regarding Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) in various
countries. Following an introduction to theoretical concepts,
responsibilities, and challenges, the subsequent chapters address,
among other topics, an analysis of policies and regulations for
water management in Brazil, the drivers that led California to
adapt to the IWRM framework, and the international regulations for
water markets and water banking in Australia and Chile. The
implications of climate change for water resource systems in Mexico
are discussed, as well as management strategies from California
that could potentially serve as IWRM adaptation schemes in Mexico.
Critical cases from Guanacaste (Costa Rica), and from Zayandehrud
River Basin and Lake Urmia (Iran) are reviewed in terms of
management practices and solutions. The book also provides an
overview of the current availability and use of water resources in
South Korea, and discusses the management of and international
water law instruments for transboundary groundwater in Africa.
Across the Americas, Indigenous and Afro-descendent peoples have
demanded autonomy, self-determination, and self-governance. By
exerting their collective rights, they have engaged with domestic
and international standards on the rights of Indigenous Peoples,
implemented full-fledged mechanisms for autonomous governance, and
promoted political and constitutional reform aimed at expanding
understandings of multicultural citizenship and the plurinational
state. Yet these achievements come in conflict with national
governments' adoption of neoliberal economic and neo-extractive
policies which advance their interests over those of Indigenous
communities.Available for the first time in English, Indigenous
Territorial Autonomy and Self-Government in the Diverse Americas
explores current and historical struggles for autonomy within
ancestral territories, experiences of self-governance in operation,
and presents an overview of achievements, challenges, and threats
across three decades. Case studies across Bolivia, Chile,
Nicaragua, Peru, Colombia, Mexico, Panama, Ecuador, and Canada
provide a detailed discussion of autonomy and self-governance in
development and in practice. Paying special attention to the role
of Indigenous peoples' organizations and activism in pursuing
sociopolitical transformation, securing rights, and confronting
multiple dynamics of dispossession, this book engages with current
debates on Indigenous politics, relationships with national
governments and economies, and the multicultural and plurinational
state. This book will spark critical reflection on political
experience and further exploration of the possibilities of the
self-determination of peoples through territorial autonomies.
Across the Americas, Indigenous and Afro-descendent peoples have
demanded autonomy, self-determination, and self-governance. By
exerting their collective rights, they have engaged with domestic
and international standards on the rights of Indigenous Peoples,
implemented full-fledged mechanisms for autonomous governance, and
promoted political and constitutional reform aimed at expanding
understandings of multicultural citizenship and the plurinational
state. Yet these achievements come in conflict with national
governments’ adoption of neoliberal economic and neo-extractive
policies which advance their interests over those of Indigenous
communities.Available for the first time in English, Indigenous
Territorial Autonomy and Self-Government in the Diverse Americas
explores current and historical struggles for autonomy within
ancestral territories, experiences of self-governance in operation,
and presents an overview of achievements, challenges, and threats
across three decades. Case studies across Bolivia, Chile,
Nicaragua, Peru, Colombia, Mexico, Panama, Ecuador, and Canada
provide a detailed discussion of autonomy and self-governance in
development and in practice. Paying special attention to the role
of Indigenous peoples’ organizations and activism in pursuing
sociopolitical transformation, securing rights, and confronting
multiple dynamics of dispossession, this book engages with current
debates on Indigenous politics, relationships with national
governments and economies, and the multicultural and plurinational
state. This book will spark critical reflection on political
experience and further exploration of the possibilities of the
self-determination of peoples through territorial autonomies.
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Hartas (Paperback)
Pablo Ortiz Monasterio
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R653
Discovery Miles 6 530
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Between 2016 and 2018 Pablo Ortiz Monasterio visited the city of
Buenos Aires in Argentina three times. Observing how the "Me too"
movement was gaining strength not only in the United States, but
also throughout Latin America, Ortiz Monasterio witnesses the
power, latent and at the same time palpable, of the women of the
city. Women, he says, who step strong and portrayed in this small
book of a great moment, represent the forcefulness of the
affectsthat lead the feminist movements that fight and work for a
fairer future.
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Las Mexicanas
Pablo Ortiz Monasterio
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R512
R463
Discovery Miles 4 630
Save R49 (10%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Much of the body of images in this edition come from a private
collection created during more than a decade of visits to the main
flea markets in Mexico City with the complicity of connoisseurs,
support from booksellers and merchants. Given its nature, the
volume attracts a large audience interested not only in collecting
and the study of photography, but also in the themes of social
sciences, feminisms, and cultural representations. With the spirit
of proposing an alternative starting poing for approaching
photography, Las Mexicanas highlights the intimate and powerful
relationship between the photographic medium, women and all those
people who, in Mexico, were fortunate to have a camera in their
hands.
This book presents case studies that share important experiences
regarding Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) in various
countries. Following an introduction to theoretical concepts,
responsibilities, and challenges, the subsequent chapters address,
among other topics, an analysis of policies and regulations for
water management in Brazil, the drivers that led California to
adapt to the IWRM framework, and the international regulations for
water markets and water banking in Australia and Chile. The
implications of climate change for water resource systems in Mexico
are discussed, as well as management strategies from California
that could potentially serve as IWRM adaptation schemes in Mexico.
Critical cases from Guanacaste (Costa Rica), and from Zayandehrud
River Basin and Lake Urmia (Iran) are reviewed in terms of
management practices and solutions. The book also provides an
overview of the current availability and use of water resources in
South Korea, and discusses the management of and international
water law instruments for transboundary groundwater in Africa.
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