Centro de Estudios Municipales y de Cooperación Internacional (CEMCI)

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Centro de Estudios Municipales y de Cooperación Internacional (CEMCI)

SYMPOSIUM ON CITIES AND INFRASTRUCTURE NETWORKS

GRAHAM, STEPHEN;KAIKA, MARIA;TOLEDO SILVA, ROBERTO;OFFNER, JEAN-MARC

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, n.º 1/2000, pág. 114

Sumario
1. Introduction: Cities and infrastructurenetworks. 2. Fetishizing the modern city: the phantasmagoriaof urban technological networks. 3. The connectivity ofinfrastructure networks and the urban space of Sao Paulo inthe 1990's. 4. "Territorial deregulation": local authoritiesat risk from technical networks. 5. Constructing premiumnetwork spaces: reflections on infrastructure networks andcontemporary urban development.

SYMPOSIUM ON URBAN STUDIES IN SOUTH AFRICA AFTER APARTHEID

VARIOS

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, n.º 4/2000, pág. 832

Sumario
1. Introduction. 2. Backyard Soweto. 3. Thecentrality of community capacity in state low-income housingprovision in Cape Town, South Africa. 4. Wage strategies andminimum wages in decentralized regions: the case of theclothing industry in Phuthaditjhaba, South Africa. 5.Democratization and politics in South African townships.

TACKLING SOCIAL EXCLUSION IN THE EUROPEAN UNION? THE LIMITS TO THE NEW ORTHODOXY OF LOCAL PARTNERSHIP

GEDDES, MIKE

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, n.º 4/2000, pág. 782

Sumario
1. Social exclusion in the European Union. 2.Local crisis and the rise of local partnership. 3.Partnership and local governance capacity: papering over thecracks?. 4. Partnership and inclusive local governance:empowering excluded communities?. 5. The social and economicimpact of local partnerships. 6. Conclusions.

TALKING BUSINESS: AN ACTOR-CENTRED ANALYSIS OF BUSINESS AGENDAS FOR LOCAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

NORTH, PETER;VALLER, DAVID;WOOD, ANDREW

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, n.º 4/2001, pág. 830

Sumario
1. Introduction. 2. Towards an actor-centred approach. 3. Research methods: the construction of business identities. 4. Three declining English towns. 5. Conclusion.

TECHNOLOGICAL PARKS: THEIR THEORY AND REALITY IN SPAIN.

YBARRA, JOSEP ANTONI;DOMENECH, RAFAEL;GINER, JOSE MIGUEL

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, n.º 3/1991, pág. 383

Sumario
1. Introduction. 2. Theorical considerations:ìenvironmental resources for new technologies. 3. Problems ofìpublic policy in the promotion of technological parks. 4.ìSpanish technological parks: an approach to their specificìproblems.

TENTH URBAN CHANGE AND CONFLICT CONFERENCE, ROYAL HOLLOWAY AND BEDFORD COLLEGE, SEPTEMBER 1995

TEEDON, PAUL

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, n.º 2/1996, pág. 355

Sumario
1. Identities, citizenship and power in the cities.

TERRITORIAL COMPETITION AND THE PREDICTABILITY OF COLLECTIVE (IN)ACTION

CHESHIRE, PAUL C.;GORDON, IAN R.

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, n.º 3/1996, pág. 383

Sumario
1. Introduction. 2. The logic of territorial competition. 3. The organizational base for territorial competition. 4. Hypotheses about territorial competition. 5. The experience of territorial competition. 6. Testing the hypotheses about competitive activity. 7. Some wider implications of territorial competition. 8. References.

THE AMBIGUOUS TERRAIN OF RIGHTS: CIVIC STRATIFICATION IN ITALY'S EMERGENT IMMIGRATION REGIME

MORRIS, LYDIA

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, n.º 3/2001, pág. 497

Sumario
1. An emergent hybrid system. 2. The process ofregularization. 3. Quotas, sanatoria and establishment. 4.Family life. 5. Impediments to rights. 6. Reception centresas social support. 7. Emergency provisions and FPWPs. 8.Classification and control. 9. Asylum and humanitarianprotection. 10. Conclusion.

THE AMBIVALENCE OF DIVERSITY AND THE POLITICS OF URBAN RENAISSANCE: THE CASE OF YOUTH IN DOWNTOWN PORTLAND, MAINE

LEES, LORETTA

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, n.º 3/2003, pág. 613 a 632

Sumario
SUMMARY: 1. VISIONS OF URBAN RENAISSANCE 2. METHODOLOGY 3. URBAN REDEVELOPMENT IN PORTLAND 4. THE DIVERSITY OF DIVERSITIES IN PLANNING DISCOURSE 5. ENACTING DIVERSITY AND CIVIL SOCIETY IN THE CITY 6. THE PARADOXICAL POSSIBILITES OF THE CITY

THE BANALITY OF INTERDICTION: SURVEILLANCE, CONTROL AND THE DISPLACEMENT OF DIVERSITY

FLUSTY, STEVEN

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, n.º 3/2001, pág. 658

Sumario
1. Paranoia revisited. 2. Have a safe one... 3. Noparking. 4. Nicer than the real thing. 5. The banality ofinterdiction.

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