000 01730pab a2200205 454500
008 180718b2005 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aRodriguez-Acosta, Cristina A.
245 _aLocal government and the governance of metropolitan areas in Latin America
260 _c2005
300 _ap.295-306.
362 _aOct
520 _aTwo of the most important trends occurring in Latin America and the Caribbean during the past quarter century have been rapid urbanisation and government decentralisation. With approximately 75% of its 520 million inhabitants living in urban areas, the region has seen the emergence of such mega-cities as Buenos Aires, Lima, Mexico City and Sao Paulo. At the same time, teh region, partly on its own and partly prodded by international organisations and donors, has been struggling with the issue of decentralising its historically highly centralised national governments and strengthening its traditionally very weak and highly dependent local governments. In this article, the authors examine local governance structures in several major urban areas of Latin America in order to understand how these two sometime highly contradictory developments are impacting upon the governance of metropolitan areas and the resolution of the major problems facing them. particular attention is paid to emerging cooperative arrangements that may in the future help to address significant metropolitan area issues. - Reproduced.
650 _aUrbanization - Latin America
650 _aDecentralization - Latin America
650 _aLocal government - Latin America
650 _aLocal government
700 _aRosenbaum, Allan
773 _aPublic Administration and Development
909 _a67438
999 _c67438
_d67438