First published in 1998, this collaboration responds to the rapid urbanization of African and Latin American countries and features ideas for sustainable urban development in these areas from specialists in environmental engineering, sustainable cities, urban and environmental planning, air pollution, mega cities and environmental law. Scholarship has explored issues of politics and the economy such as (re)democratization and decentralization, economic conditions and privatization policies imposed by international donors, but the impact of the urban setting of these areas remains understudied despite the major environmental changes brought about by these urban contexts. Environmental Strategies seeks to solve this gap. It will be of particular interest for policy makers and urban planners.
1. Learning from the South. Edesio Fernandes.
2. Global, Regional and
Local Perspectives Towards Sustainable Urban and Rural Development. Jonas
Rabinovitch.
3. The Role of NGOs and CBOs in a Sustainable Development
Strategy for Metropolitan Cape Town, South Africa. Vuyiswa Tindleni.
4.
Environmental Problems in Cities in the South: Sharing my Confusions. David
Satterthwaite.
5. Urban Environmental Management Strategies and Action Plans
in Sćo Paulo and Kumasi. Carl R. Bartone.
6. A New Air Pollution Program for
Mexico City. Leonardo Martķnez-Flores.
7. Towards Sustainable Mega-Cities in
Latin America and Africa. Janice Perlman.
8. The Experience of Regional
Environmental Management in Bio Bio, Chile. Bolivar Ruiz-Adaros.
9.
Sustainable Cities and Local Governance: Lessons from a Global UN Program.
Jochen Eigen.
10. Innovative Strategies for Sustainable Development in the
Middle East and North Africa. Christian Arandel.
11. Sustainable Cities: a
Contradiction in Terms? Herbert Girardet.
Edesio Fernandes is Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies of the University of London. His research interests include urban and environmental planning, policy and legislation in developing countries.