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Showing 1 - 9 of 9 matches in All Departments
Provides a comparative study of the complex governance challenges confronting city-regions in each of the BRICS countries. It traces how governance approaches emerge from the disparate intentions, actions and practices of multiple collaborating and competing actors, working in diverse contexts of political settlement and culture. The scale and pace of urban change in the recent past has been disorienting. As individual cities evolve into complex urban agglomerations, scholars battle to find adequate vocabularies for contemporary urban processes while practitioners search for meaningful governance responses. Governing Complex City-Regions in the Twenty-first Century explores the ongoing evolution of metropolitan governance as diverse urban agents grapple with the dilemmas of collective action across multi-layered and fragmented institutions, in contexts where there are also manifold centres of influence and decision-making. Whereas much of the existing literature is founded on the settled urban contexts of Western Europe and North America this book draws on the experiences of the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa). The author shows that governance approaches are rarely designed but emerge, rather, from the disparate intentions, actions and practices of multiple collaborating and competing actors working within diverse contexts of political settlement and political culture. Intended for students, academics and professionals, the book does not offer packaged solutions or easy answers to the challenges of urban governance, but it does show the value of comparative study in inspiring new thought and perspectives, which could lead to improved governance practice within South African contexts.
The Promise of Planning explores the experience of planning internationally since the global financial crisis, focusing on South Africa. The book is a response to a decade-plus in which state-led planning has re-emerged as a putative means for achieving developmental goals (as indicated in global initiatives such as the New Urban Agenda) and where planning in South Africa has consolidated in terms of its legal and policy basis. However, the return of planning is happening in an inauspicious context, with economic fragilities, technological shifts, political populism, institutional complexities, and more, threatening to upturn the "new promise of planning." The book provides a careful analytical account of planning in South Africa and how and why its promises have been difficult to achieve. Building on the authors’ previous book, Planning and Transformation, the book sheds light on planning as an increasingly complex and diverse governmental practice within a perpetually changing world. It can be used as a resource for planners who must make good on the new promise of planning while navigating the risks and threats of the contemporary world, as well as students and faculty interested in international planning debates and the South African case.
In the years after the 1994 transition to democracy in South
Africa, planners were convinced that they would be able to
successfully promote a vision of integrated, equitable and
sustainable cities, and counter the spatial distortions created by
apartheid. This book explores the experience of planning in South
Africa during the ten years from 1994, with the aim of contributing
to key international debates in planning theory. The authors argue
that, because of the highly fluid nature of South African society
during these last ten years, this country provides a useful
'laboratory' in which to explore the possibilities of achievement
in the planning field. Thus while many of the factors which have
affected planning have been context-specific, the nature of South
Africa's transition and its relationship to global dynamics have
meant that many of the issues which confront planners in other
parts of the world are echoed here as well. Issues of governance,
integration, market competitiveness, sustainability, democracy and
values are as significant here as they are elsewhere, and the
particular nature of the South African experience lends new
insights to thinking on these questions.
In the years after the 1994 transition to democracy in South
Africa, planners were convinced that they would be able to
successfully promote a vision of integrated, equitable and
sustainable cities, and counter the spatial distortions created by
apartheid. This book explores the experience of planning in South
Africa during the ten years from 1994, with the aim of contributing
to key international debates in planning theory. The authors argue
that, because of the highly fluid nature of South African society
during these last ten years, this country provides a useful
'laboratory' in which to explore the possibilities of achievement
in the planning field. Thus while many of the factors which have
affected planning have been context-specific, the nature of South
Africa's transition and its relationship to global dynamics have
meant that many of the issues which confront planners in other
parts of the world are echoed here as well. Issues of governance,
integration, market competitiveness, sustainability, democracy and
values are as significant here as they are elsewhere, and the
particular nature of the South African experience lends new
insights to thinking on these questions.
A fictionalised version of the events surrounding the Ku Klux Klan's murder of three civil rights workers in Mississippi in 1964. Anderson and Ward (Gene Hackman and Willem Dafoe) are the FBI men sent to investigate the case. What they find is a tangled web of intimidation and silence, with no one willing to speak about the events for fear of Klan reprisals. The supporting cast features Brad Dourif as a local lawman and Frances McDormand in an Oscar-nominated performance as his wife.
'Can We Have a Chat About Eddie?' is a comic novel which examines the power our environment has to shape our identity and challenges authoritarian notions of right and wrong. In 1943 Nora Empire's only son, Edward, is reported missing following a bombing raid over Cologne. Twenty years later Edward Roberts is born and Nora is asked to look after him while his mother runs the village Post Office. Over the next fourteen years a close bond develops between the pair and Eddie becomes fascinated by both the mystery surrounding his namesake's death and what he perceives to be the continuing struggle against fascism, particularly as it manifests itself at Oldcastle Grammar School. Eddie's subsequent moral crusade and refusal to accept his position in society bring him into continual conflict with the authorities; a conflict which eventually leads to his arrest. Can Eddie change his destiny?
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