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  • Hertie School  (2)
  • SB Zossen
  • ZZF Potsdam
  • Anthropozän  (1)
  • Bürgerbeteiligung  (1)
Type of Medium
Language
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  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_161070424X
    Format: XIV, 247 S , graph. Darst
    ISBN: 9781137271839
    Series Statement: St Antony's series
    Content: "Political scientists have long wondered whether civic participation can have spillover effects - that is, whether civic participation in one particular domain of public life can lead to more participation in other areas. This book argues that participation can indeed be generative. New participants in participatory governance initiatives can acquire new skills, apply them to new areas of their lives, and join new organizations, even in very poor regions. The evidence is based on a large survey - among the broadest in its class - of participants in community-managed schools (CMS) in rural Honduras and Alta Verapaz, Guatemala, together with case studies and historical institutional analysis. This study is thus more optimistic about the promise of participation than other studies. While it recognizes that participatory arenas are often constrained by features of program design, local context, and national political problems, this book shows that participation is not a dead-end affair. Participation can breed new and unexpected forms of civicness, even in the most unlikely settings"--
    Note: Machine generated contents note:List of Tables and Figures -- Preface and Acknowledgments -- PART I: THE RISE OF PARTICIPATORY GOVERNANCE -- 1. Introduction: The Promise of Participation -- 2. The Rise of Participatory Governance -- 3. The Rise of Community Managed Schools: Push and Pull Factors -- PART II: SPILLOVER EFFECTS -- 4. Looking for Evidence: Survey Design, Methodological Issues, and First Clues -- 5. Stimulating Participation: Individual Inputs, State Inputs, and Context -- 6. The Case Studies: Field Work, Methodological Issues, and New Clues -- 7. Exogenous Factors and Spillovers: The Role of the State -- 8. Endogenous Factors and Spillovers: Time Commitment and Internal Democracy -- PART III: OBSTACLES TO SPILLOVERS -- 9. Obstacles to Spillovers -- 10. Political Obstacles: Patronage and Polarization -- 11. The Impact of Patronage and Polarization on Participation and Program Survival -- PART IV: CONCLUSION -- 12. The Limits and Limitations of Spillovers -- 13. Conclusion -- Appendices.
    Language: English
    Keywords: Politische Beteiligung ; Bürgerbeteiligung ; Spill-over-Effekt
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_1780520654
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (432 pages)
    ISBN: 9781800883666
    Series Statement: Multidisciplinary movements in research
    Content: Contents: Foreword / Sirkku Juhola Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Farewell to the holocene city / Francisco Javier Carrillo -- Part I: Urban climate vulnerability 1. Unprecedented challenge: Implications for climate resilient urban planning / Anja Wejs -- 2. Insights and challenges from oxfam's disaster management work / Janice Ian Manlutac, Velina Petrova and Irene Guijt -- 3. Down scale agency / Lelani M. Mannetti -- 4. The impossibility of accelerated risk management possible pathways / Theresa Scavenius -- Part II: Pioneer movements in city preparedness -- 5. Directory of urban preparedness / Tatiana Schreiner -- 6. Local adaptation plans: Comparisons and lessons learned / Charlotte da Cunha and Elena Lioubimtseva -- 7. Can salutogenesis contribute to prepare cities for climate change? / Ruca Maass, Monica Lillefjell and Kirsti S. Anthun -- 8.competencies for viable subsistence / Danuta Kaźmierczak -- Part III: Indicators and benchmarking -- 9. Cities and climate change: A review of current metrics / Priscila Nesello and Ana Cristina Fachinelli -- 10. Knowledge city benchmarking and the makci experience / Blanca C. Garcia -- 11. Learnings from knowledge-based development metrics / Ana Cristina Fachinelli, Rafael L. Perini and Priscila Nesello -- 12. Capital systems for city preparedness: A framework / Omar Zermeño -- Part IV: Deep innovation and knowledge markets for city preparedness -- 13. Deep innovation / Thomas J. Burns -- 14. Knowledge markets regimes for the urban climate emergency / Francisco Javier Carrillo -- 15. The sharing cosmopolis: Prosperity without growth / Douglas Kelbaugh -- 16. Effective collaborative climate change governance in urban areas / Lorena Pasquini, Dania Petrik, Balbina Nyamakura, Kate Strachan, Meggan Spires, Sheona Shackleton and Gina Ziervogel -- Part V: Staying with urban trouble -- 17. Urban dysfunctionalities before the anthropocene / Ali Modarres -- 18. Bunkerization: Elite preparedness and retreat in the anthropocene / Daniel South and Nigel South -- 19. Climate change, migration, and preparedness / Stephan A. Schwartz -- 20. Relocation and climate migration / Immaculata Olu Omojola and Mike Boni Bazza -- Part VI: Urban futures -- 21. Urban autonomous zones and the mitigation of climate disasters / Oliver Kellhammer -- 22. Urban relational capital and new transaction regimes / Angel Eustorgio Rivera, Gibran Rivera and Francisco Javier Carrillo -- 23. Neo-medievalism: Self-governed sub national governments / Ravindra K. Srivastava -- 24. An object-oriented framework for subsistence assurance / Jose I. Icaza -- Part VII: Re-imagining the city -- 25. Political economies of 'the commons' / Gavin Keeney, Owen O'Carroll and David S. Jones -- 26. A youth perspective on green local urban futures / Joshua Amponsem, Nathalie Sänger and Marie-Claire Graf -- 27. Fostering resilient co-learning ecosystems in the city / Raphaële Bidault-Waddington -- 28. Regenerative urban development / Beth Schaefer Caniglia Conclusion to City Preparedness for the Climate Crisis / Cathy Garner -- Index.
    Content: "Exploring the ways that contemporary urban life takes the Holocene for granted, this multidisciplinary book warns that anthropogenic environmental impacts are on course to challenge the viability of most human settlements. It highlights how, despite increased warnings, most cities appear to be in denial of the potential impending catastrophes and remain ill-prepared to handle major disruptions. Chapters offer a critical appraisal of the end of an urban epoch: the Holocene city. Moving from more general aspects of urban vulnerability in the face of the Anthropocene, the book then looks at more specific issues and cases illustrating alternative adaptation pathways. It further analyses existing approaches, movements and networks for urban preparedness for the climate crisis, offering visualisations of the ways these can be improved, conceiving alternative futures and reinventing the city. A timely resource for this emerging topic, the book will be beneficial to urban studies, environmental science and development studies scholars. Practitioners in urban planning, design, management and evaluation will also find the critical case studies in the book particularly helpful"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781800883659
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als ISBN 9781800883659(hardback)
    Language: English
    Keywords: Anthropozän ; Stadtleben ; Umweltfaktor ; Klimaänderung ; Stadtentwicklung ; Electronic books
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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