Date
21 July 2017
Description
Until relatively recently, the status quo in the cities of the Global South vacillated between neglect and persecution of the poor. In the past decade, however, we have seen a paradigm shift in urban policy, and cities in Brazil, Colombia and elsewhere are pioneering new approaches to urban planning and governance that recognize self-built settlements as legitimate, consolidated neighborhoods requiring intensive and sustained state intervention.
Photo: icon0.com
Database Tags
Brazil (5)
Catalonia (7)
Chile (2)
City council (61)
Commons (18)
Covid19 (46)
Culture (5)
Czech Republic (2)
Degrowth (7)
Democracy (85)
Economy (34)
Elections (38)
Energy (17)
Environmentalism (39)
EU (14)
Far right (8)
Fearless Cities (47)
Feminism (19)
Food (6)
France (12)
Germany (7)
Housing (22)
Immigration (5)
Italy (8)
Kurdistan (7)
Labour (7)
Mexico (4)
Movement (147)
Murray Bookchin (18)
Netherlands (4)
Origins (19)
Palestine (2)
Policy (103)
Portugal (2)
Racism (4)
Serbia (5)
Spain (51)
Technology (15)
Theory (60)
Translocal (24)
Turkey (2)
UK (27)
Urban planning (30)
USA (39)
Water (8)