El Centro de Impulso al Desarrollo Integral de Regiones y Localidades (CEIDIR.ORG) ofrece acceso a actividades y servicios electrónicos a los interesados en temas de desarrollo económico y social en el ámbito local (por ejemplo a nivel municipal).
Nuestro objetivo primordial es recabar, generar y difundir información sobre acciones de desarrollo endógeno o desde abajo ejecutadas en localidades alrededor del mundo. Los principales temas de interés son:
La influencia de la globalización en el desarrollo local
El rol de la emprendeduría en el desarrollo local
Inclusión social y desarrollo local
Redes de intercambio y cooperación para el desarrollo local
Planeación estratégica para el desarrollo local.
Medio ambiente y desarrollo local
El documento 'El Enfoque de Desarrollo Económico Local desde Abajo de la A a la Z' sintetiza nuestra visión de desarrollo.
El Enfoque de Desarrollo Local desde Abajo de la A a la Z.
El menú lateral otorga acceso a la revista electrónica de CEIDIR y a información sobre nuestras consejerías y otros servicios.
En el siguiente vínculo podrá conocer más detalles sobre nuestra organización: MISIÓN y OBJETIVOS
Para solicitarnos información escríbanos a ceidir@netscape.net
¡Con gusto lo atenderemos!
SÍGUENOS EN FACEBOOK
The Policy Press, 15/02/2012 - 261 páginas
This book investigates how the meanings and politics of urban sustainability are being radically rethought in response to the economic downturn and the credit crunch. In this ground-breaking contribution, prominent scholars provide up to date coverage of the impacts of recent changes on key areas of urban planning, including housing, transport, and the environment, and map out core areas for future research.
lexander C. T. Geppert. Fleeting Cities: Imperial Expositions in
Fin-de-Siecle Europe. New York Palgrave Macmillan, 2009. 424 pp.
$95.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-230-22164-2.
Reviewed by Jill Steward (School of Historical Studies, Newcastle
University)
Published on H-Urban (March, 2012)
Commissioned by Alexander Vari
Laboratories for Scrutinizing Modernity: Imperial Exhibitions
The great world and imperial exhibitions of the second half of the
nineteenth century, sometimes described as one of the era's most
distinctive products, were made possible by innovative technologies
in transport, building, and communication and given the oxygen of
publicity by the world's media industries. An urban phenomenon, they
were visible signs of the transnational mobility of people, goods,
and information made possible by technical innovation, industrial
development, and commercial enterprise. Supported by the press, they
contributed to the dissemination of knowledge and information across
national boundaries and encouraged economic and cultural transfers.
They made an enormous contribution to the growth of urban tourism and
the spread of new and distinctively modern forms of visual culture
and mass entertainment. It is not surprising therefore, that
exhibitions could be seen not only as indications of modernity, but
also its catalysts and agents.
As we contemplate the intense media excitement aroused by the
mega-events of our own time, notably the Olympic Games (which were
merely sideshows at the 1900 Exhibition Universelle in Paris and the
1908 Franco-British Exhibition), we can understand the impact made by
their nineteenth-century predecessors on the public imagination by
the "fleeting cities" of the title of Alexander Geppert's study of
imperial exhibitions, an allusion to Baudelaire's characterization of
modernity as a set of representational practices embracing "the
ephemeral, the fugitive, the contingent," which involved the
temporary occupation of acres of
he Global Urban Competitiveness Report - 2011
Pengfei Ni
Pengfei Ni, Director, Center for City and Competitiveness, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and Professor of Economics, Institute of Finance and Trade Economics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China
April 2012 416 pp Hardback 978 0 85793 421 5
Hardback c$175.00 on-line price c$157.50
Qty
This book is also available as an ebook 978 1 78100 892 8 from -
www.EBSCOhost.comwww.ebrary.com/corp/www.books.google.com/ebooks
Description
'This Report - 2011 gives an overwhelming amount of comprehensive information for city managers trying to cope with the ever-increasing competition between cities in attracting investments, talent, firms, knowledge, events etc. Apart from an update of the ranking of 500 cities this new publication offers a lot of additional information, such as a selection of the best examples of competitive cities. The book is recommended for everybody interested in the strengths and weaknesses of the major cities in the world.'
- Leo van den Berg, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Contents
Contents: 1. Annual Ranking 2. Conceptual Framework and Analytical Methods 3. Global Scale Urban Competitiveness Analyses 4. Urban Competitiveness Analyses of Sub-regions and Key Countries 5. Urban Competitiveness Analyses of Several Group of Cities 6. Econometric Findings 7. Best Cases on Competitive Cities 8. Global Urban Competitiveness Indices Bibliography
Further information
'This Report - 2011 gives an overwhelming amount of comprehensive information for city managers trying to cope with the ever-increasing competition between cities in attracting investments, talent, firms, knowledge, events etc. Apart from an update of the ranking of 500 cities this new publication offers a lot of additional information, such as a selection of the best examples of competitive cities. The book is recommended for everybody interested in the strengths and weaknesses of the major citi
Why Mix Urban Planning and Social Media?
Contemporary urban planning uses many techniques to get people involved in a particular planning process. These techniques range from mail-in or telephone surveys to multiple-day design charrettes or open houses. The advent of social media, which is a set of tools found on the internet like blogs, forums, wikis, social networking sites, and collaborative software, is really exciting for the planning field. All of these tools can help communities think about, design, and build the kind of communities they want. Social media tools can also help planners and local governments stay in touch with people to make planning more effective and representative.
This essay describes social media in more detail and tries to explain why people like to participate in social media. It also describes ways in which social media can help planning be more participatory. Nevertheless, there are some limits to social media. Hopefully you will find this article interesting! There are plenty of links and references to follow where you can learn more.
- Daniella Fergusson