Description

Book Synopsis
The cities of the developing world are hubs of economic growth, but they are increasingly ecologically unsustainable and, for ordinary citizens, increasingly unliveable. This book explores the issues of livelihood and ecological sustainability in cities of the developing and transitional world.

Trade Review
"An exciting book that captures the urban environmental condition through the struggles and knowledge of real people, Livable Cities? reveals how grassroots input can make top-down policy more effective. By focusing on small, seldom-studied communities in such countries as Vietnam, the book illuminates the particular intersection between larger environmental dynamics and their concrete materializations in specific settings." - Saskia Sassen, author of The Global City 2001; "This is an essential book about a fundamental topic: the urban politics of environmental sustainability. Leading social researchers from around the world provide a rigorous assessment on the conditions under which local societies can contribute to the development of a sustainable global order." - Manuel Castells, co-author of The Local and the Global: Management of Cities in the Information Age; "Livable Cities? introduces a fresh and crucial agenda for scholars and activists: how can communities across the world organize to foster both environmental reform and economic well-being-in a word, "livability"? Urban scholars, development scholars, and those in the growing environmental field will take a keen interest in this book." - Harvey Molotch, co-author of Building Rules: How Local Controls Shape Building Environments and Economies; "Peter Evans opens up a new area of thinking on how global environmental problems arise in the context of cities in the Third World and how they are translated into continuing policy debates and political struggles." - John R. Logan, author of The New Chinese City: Globalization and Market Reform; "Within a comprehensive theoretical framework, Livable Cities? studies how particular "ecologies" of political actors have formed in diverse cities in East Asia, Europe, and Latin America to improve the quality of life in poor communities. With its focus on cities and their disempowered majorities, this book provides a welcome contribution to the politics of "another" development, one centered on people's well-being." - John Friedmann, co-author of Human Settlements and Planning for Ecological Sustainability: The Case of Mexico City

Table of Contents
List of Tables and Illustrations Preface Manuel Castells Acknowledgments 1. Introduction: Looking for Agents of Urban Livability in a Globalized Political Economy Peter Evans 2. Urban Poverty and the Environment: Social Capital and State-Community Synergy in Seoul and Bangkok Mike Douglass, Orathai Ard-am, and Ik Ki Kim 3. Collective Action toward a Sustainable City: Citizens' Movements and Environmental Politics in Taipei Hsin-Huang Michael Hsiao and Hwa-Jen Liu 4. Community-Driven Regulation: Toward an Improved Model of Environmental Regulation in Vietnam Dara O'Rourke 5. Social and Spatial Inequalities in Hungarian Environmental Politics: A Historical Perspective Zsuzsa Gille 6. "Water, Water, Everywhere, Nor Any Drop to Drink": Land Use and Water Policy in Sao Paulo, Brazil Margaret E. Keck 7. Sustainability, Livelihood, and Community Mobilization in the Ajusco "Ecological Reserve" Keith Pezzoli 8. Political Strategies for More Livable Cities: Lessons from Six Cases of Development and Political Transition Peter Evans References List of Contributors Index

Livable Cities Urban Struggles for Livelihood and

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    A Paperback / softback by Peter Evans

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      View other formats and editions of Livable Cities Urban Struggles for Livelihood and by Peter Evans

      Publisher: University of California Press
      Publication Date: 01/02/2002
      ISBN13: 9780520230255, 978-0520230255
      ISBN10: 0520230256

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The cities of the developing world are hubs of economic growth, but they are increasingly ecologically unsustainable and, for ordinary citizens, increasingly unliveable. This book explores the issues of livelihood and ecological sustainability in cities of the developing and transitional world.

      Trade Review
      "An exciting book that captures the urban environmental condition through the struggles and knowledge of real people, Livable Cities? reveals how grassroots input can make top-down policy more effective. By focusing on small, seldom-studied communities in such countries as Vietnam, the book illuminates the particular intersection between larger environmental dynamics and their concrete materializations in specific settings." - Saskia Sassen, author of The Global City 2001; "This is an essential book about a fundamental topic: the urban politics of environmental sustainability. Leading social researchers from around the world provide a rigorous assessment on the conditions under which local societies can contribute to the development of a sustainable global order." - Manuel Castells, co-author of The Local and the Global: Management of Cities in the Information Age; "Livable Cities? introduces a fresh and crucial agenda for scholars and activists: how can communities across the world organize to foster both environmental reform and economic well-being-in a word, "livability"? Urban scholars, development scholars, and those in the growing environmental field will take a keen interest in this book." - Harvey Molotch, co-author of Building Rules: How Local Controls Shape Building Environments and Economies; "Peter Evans opens up a new area of thinking on how global environmental problems arise in the context of cities in the Third World and how they are translated into continuing policy debates and political struggles." - John R. Logan, author of The New Chinese City: Globalization and Market Reform; "Within a comprehensive theoretical framework, Livable Cities? studies how particular "ecologies" of political actors have formed in diverse cities in East Asia, Europe, and Latin America to improve the quality of life in poor communities. With its focus on cities and their disempowered majorities, this book provides a welcome contribution to the politics of "another" development, one centered on people's well-being." - John Friedmann, co-author of Human Settlements and Planning for Ecological Sustainability: The Case of Mexico City

      Table of Contents
      List of Tables and Illustrations Preface Manuel Castells Acknowledgments 1. Introduction: Looking for Agents of Urban Livability in a Globalized Political Economy Peter Evans 2. Urban Poverty and the Environment: Social Capital and State-Community Synergy in Seoul and Bangkok Mike Douglass, Orathai Ard-am, and Ik Ki Kim 3. Collective Action toward a Sustainable City: Citizens' Movements and Environmental Politics in Taipei Hsin-Huang Michael Hsiao and Hwa-Jen Liu 4. Community-Driven Regulation: Toward an Improved Model of Environmental Regulation in Vietnam Dara O'Rourke 5. Social and Spatial Inequalities in Hungarian Environmental Politics: A Historical Perspective Zsuzsa Gille 6. "Water, Water, Everywhere, Nor Any Drop to Drink": Land Use and Water Policy in Sao Paulo, Brazil Margaret E. Keck 7. Sustainability, Livelihood, and Community Mobilization in the Ajusco "Ecological Reserve" Keith Pezzoli 8. Political Strategies for More Livable Cities: Lessons from Six Cases of Development and Political Transition Peter Evans References List of Contributors Index

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