This book evaluates the impact of 20 years of urban policies in six Latin American countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Mexico. It argues that evaluating the fulfillment of past commitments is essential for framing and meeting the new commitments that were taken in Habitat III over the next 20 years.
Taken as a whole, the book provides a critical assessment of the economic, social and environmental consequences of urban interventions during Habitat II. The country-level chapters have been written by recognized experts in urban issues, with first-hand knowledge of the Habitat process, and deep familiarity with the problems, statistics, actors and political contexts of their nations. The latter part of the volume considers wider topics such as the Habitat Commitment Index, the New Urban Agenda and the regional and global-scale lessons that can be extracted from this group of countries.
Urban Policy in Latin America will be of interest to advanced students, researchers and policymakers across development economics, urban studies and Latin American studies.
Contents List of contributors Acknowledgements Prologue to the English
edition. Mary Watson Prologue to the Spanish edition. Michelle DePass
Chapter
1 - Introduction
Marķa Carrizosa, Michael Cohen and Margarita Gutman
Chapter 2 - The Evolution
of Urban Policy in Developing Countries: A Comparative Perspective Michael
Cohen
Chapter 3 - Mexico. From Habitat II to Habitat III: Assessment of the
commitments undertaken Alicia Ziccardi
Chapter 4: Chile. Houses Without
Cities Alfredo Rodrķguez and Paula Rodrķguez
Chapter 5 - Brazil. Confronting
the urban question in Brazil Edesio Fernandes
Chapter 6 - Colombia. The
Singularity of Housing Policy in Urban Development Jorge Enrique Torres
Chapter 7 - Argentina. Twenty Years of Habitat II, the Pending Subjects
Eduardo Reese and Andrea Catenazzi
Chapter 8 - Ecuador. From Istanbul to
Quito Fernando Carrión and Alexandra Velasco
Chapter 9 - Six Countries and
Twenty Years, A Transversal Reading of Latin American Urban Policy Marķa
Carrizosa
Chapter 10 - A Global Quantitative Perspective: The Habitat
Commitment Index Martha Susana Jaimes
Chapter 11 - Tiers to Tears: Measuring
City Performance Lena Simet
Chapter 12 - Habitat in Debt and Future Assets:
Towards a new inclusive urban practice Michael Cohen, Marķa Carrizosa,
Margarita Gutman
Marķa Carrizosa is Associate Director of Global Housing Policy at Habitat for Humanity International. She teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in public and private universities in New York. She is an architect and philosopher, MS in International Affairs and has postgraduate studies in Geography. Her doctoral research analyzes labor informality from a spatial lens.
Michael Cohen is a Professor of International Affairs and was Founding Director of the Graduate Program in International Affairs from The New School University in New York. He is also Co-director of the Observatory on Latin America (OLA). He has written extensively on development policy, urban development, Africa and Argentina. He has participated actively in international urban policy debates since the Habitat I Conference in 1976.
Margarita Gutman has a Ph.D. in Architecture from University of Buenos Aires (UBA). She is a Professor of Urban Studies and International Affairs and co-director of the Observatory on Latin American (OLA) at The New School in New York. She is Profesora Consulta and member of the Doctoral Commission at the School of Architecture, Design and Urbanism, UBA.