Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 306
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4422-7447-1 • Hardback • August 2017 • $116.00 • (£89.00)
978-1-4422-7448-8 • Paperback • August 2017 • $47.00 • (£36.00)
978-1-4422-7449-5 • eBook • August 2017 • $44.50 • (£35.00)
Tom Angotti is professor emeritus of urban policy and planning at Hunter College and the graduate center, City University of New York.
Part I: Poverty, Informality, and Peripheral Cities
Chapter 1: Urban Latin America: Periphery, Informality, and Inequality
Tom Angotti
Chapter 2: Poverty, Inequality, and Informality in the Latin American City
Alan Gilbert
Chapter 3: They Are Not Informal Settlements: They Are Habitats Made by People
Lorena Zárate
Chapter 4: The Future of Global Peripheral Cities
Erminia Maricato
Part II: The Metropolis in Latin America: São Paulo and Mexico City
Chapter 5: São Paulo: City of Industry, Misery, and Resistance
William W. Goldsmith and Rogerio Acca
Chapter 6: Globalization, Governance, and the Collision of Forces in Mexico City’s Historic Center
Diane E. Davis
Part III: Urban Policies, Neoliberal Reforms, and Best Practices
Chapter 7: Failed Markets: The Crisis in the Private Production of Social Housing in Mexico
Alfonso Valenzuela Aguilera
Chapter 8: Participatory Budgeting in Latin American Cities
Benjamin Goldfrank
Chapter 9: Urban Governance and Economic Development in Medellín: An “Urban Miracle”?
Tobias Franz
Chapter 10: Conflict and Convergence between Experts and Citizens: Bogotá’s TransMilenio
Stacey Hunt
Chapter 11: Barra da Tijuca: The Political Economy of a Global Suburb in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Lawrence A. Herzog
Part IV: Exceptions to the Rules
Chapter 12: Housing and Urban Development in the Cuban Revolution
Jill Hamberg
Chapter 13: Uruguay’s Housing Cooperatives: Alternative to the Private Market
Tom Angotti
Part V: Urban Struggles, Citizenship, and Public Space
Chapter 14: Citizenship, Democracy, and Public Space in Latin America
Clara Irazábal
Chapter 15: Struggles against Territorial Disqualification: Mobilization for
Dignified Housing and Defense of Heritage in Santiago
Nicolás Angelcos and María Luisa Méndez
Chapter 16: “We Are Not Marginals”: The Cultural Politics of Lead Poisoning in Montevideo, Uruguay
Daniel Renfrew
References
By most measures, Mexico City and São Paulo are two of the 10 largest cities in the world; the regional population in each is over 20 million people. With the global population rapidly expanding and living in urban areas, and with almost all projected megacities located in Latin America, Asia, and Africa, it would be prudent to have a better understanding of how cities develop and what impact neoliberal policies and growing inequalities have on urban society. This collection of 16 essays uncovers the inner workings of Latin American cities, provides a look at political processes and forms of resistance, brings to life the people who inhabit these cities, and presents readers with alternative narratives to traditional urban development as it has come to be understood in North America. By exploring alternatives to markets; by outlining forms of community control, budgeting, and opposition to neoliberal policies; and by celebrating the occupants of cities through the rejection of stereotypes like “marginal” and “informal,” Angotti’s volume takes its place as an important addition to literature on urbanization globally. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
— Choice Reviews
This text provides an excellent, coherent, and timely overview of Latin American urban development issues. The book places Latin America in its global context and profiles a broad range of projects, cities, and countries. The contributions are all original and thought-provoking, including such rarely considered but important topics as participatory budgeting, place marketing, housing cooperatives, environmental contamination, public-private partnerships, and the many claims on ‘rights to the city.’
— Ray Bromley, State University of New York at Albany
This important text makes an invaluable contribution to theory and practice on three fronts: (1) it advances relational, integrative, and comparative perspectives and methodological approaches to understanding urban Latin America in a neoliberal globalizing context; (2) it provides a deep critique of many crucial concepts, including urban peripheries, human rights, best practices, and informality; and (3) it outlines a forward-looking, countervailing perspective based on promising cases that have the potential to radically challenge neoliberalism in ways that may reduce inequality and strengthen democracy.
— Keith Pezzoli, University of California, San Diego
This powerful textoffers a much-needed critical overview of Latin America’s unique urban conditions—affected by social uprisings, anti-capitalist movements, left politics, struggles for rights, and environmental confrontations. It is a masterfully curated collection of essays that not only addresses core development moments but crafts both a hopeful and dire version of what the future can look like for the more than 600 million inhabitants of the region, as well as its potential influence on the world at large. For many of us who see Latin America as the territory closest to the possibility of emancipatory and socially just forms of urbanization, this book is a great guide for the ongoing struggle.
— Miguel Robles-Durán, The New School