Peru

Peru

Author: Bobbie Kalman

Publisher: Crabtree Publishing Company

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 36

ISBN-13: 9780778793410

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Describes the geography, natural resources, trade and industry, cities, people, transportation, agriculture, and environment of Peru.


Urban Social Movements in the Third World

Urban Social Movements in the Third World

Author: Frans Schuurman

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2012-08-21

Total Pages: 236

ISBN-13: 1136856862

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This reissue, initially published in 1989, considers the upsurge of locally-based movements attempting to improve living conditions in Third-World cities throughout the 1980s. The book presents qualitative, comparative research on the dynamics and constraints of these urban social movements, in a cross-cultural framework, using case studies from a variety of Latin American, African and Asian countries. As more democratic-type regimes establish themselves in the Third World, the possibilities for collective organisations and actions increase. Urban social movements therefore are playing an increasingly important role in the habitat of the poor.


Mobility, Markets and Indigenous Socialities

Mobility, Markets and Indigenous Socialities

Author: Dr Cecilie Vindal Ødegaard

Publisher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.

Published: 2013-06-28

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 1409481239

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Exploring how people from Andean communities seek progress and social mobility by moving to the cities, Cecilie Ødegaard demonstrates the changing significance of kinship, reciprocity and ritual in an urban context. Through a focus on people´s involvement in land occupations and local associations, labour and trade, Ødegaard examines the dialectics between popular practices and neoliberal state policies in processes of urbanization. The making and un-making of notions of the Indigenous, communal work, and gender is central in this analysis, and is discussed against the historical backdrop of the land occupations in Peruvian cities since the 1930s. Through its close ethnographic description of everyday life in a new urban neighbourhood, this book reveals how social and spatial categories and boundaries are continually negotiated in people´s quest for mobility and progress. Cecilie Ødegaard argues that conventional meanings of prosperity and progress are significantly altered in interaction with Andean understandings of reciprocity. By combining a unique ethnographic account with original theoretical arguments, the book provides new insight into the cultural, cosmological and political dimensions of mobility, progress and market participation.


Cities of the World

Cities of the World

Author: Stanley D. Brunn

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 688

ISBN-13: 9780742555976

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A fifth edition of this book is now available. This fully updated and revised fourth edition of the classic text offers readers a comprehensive set of tools for understanding the urban landscape, and by extension the world's politics, cultures, and economies. Providing a sweeping overview of world urban geography, a group of noted experts explores the eleven major global regions. Liberally illustrated with a new selection of photographs, maps, and diagrams, the text also includes a rich array of boxed vignettes. Clearly written and timely, this text will be invaluable for those teaching introductory or advanced classes on global cities, regional geography, and urban studies.