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Governing Change: The Metropolitan Revolution in Latin America
Authors:Ricky Burdett  Adam Kaasa
Abstract:In 21st-century Latin America, cities are taking the lead. With the greatest populations and economic output concentrated in large-scale metropolises, there is a real sense that the largest cities are outgrowing their national contexts. In many cases, power has been devolved at a municipal level. This has enabled mayors to implement infrastructural and transport projects. As Ricky Burdett and Adam Kaasa highlight in their discussion of two particular initiatives in São Paulo and Mexico City, it has also opened the way for innovative new community projects. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:Lima  Spanish Empire  Rio de Janeiro  São Paulo  third governance revolution  Tenochtitlán  Cities are drivers of change  Mexico City DF  Buenos Aires  new decentralisation scheme  new comunas  seven-member elected committees  Statute of the City  greater metropolitan governance  high levels of inequality  Guarapiranga-Billings reservoirs  urban violence  complex system of hierarchies  Bogotá  TransMilenio initiative  Enrique Peñalosa  Mexico City  Urban form and density  Rocinha  the largest favela in Brazil  systematic local community intervention  complementary systems of urban implementation  Cortiço Rua Solón  concrete-frame multistory structure  Bom Retiro  University of São Paulo's Faculty of Architecture  Edifício Uniao  Cidade Tiradentes  devolved governance  Asamblea Comunitaria de Miravalle  community-based project  borough of Iztapalapa  PET plastic  vegetable garden  resurgence of collective will  citizen engagement  Bernal Díaz del Castillo  Hernan Cortés  José de Souza Martins  transitive multiculturalism  capacity for difference
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