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- catalog contributor b10591521.
- catalog coverage "Mexico City (Mexico) Economic conditions.".
- catalog coverage "Mexico City (Mexico) Politics and government.".
- catalog coverage "Mexico City (Mexico) Social conditions.".
- catalog created "c1998.".
- catalog date "1998".
- catalog date "c1998.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1998.".
- catalog description "1. The Paradox of Dominance yet Dependence: the Local in the National in the Global. Cities within a global system. From boom to bust and back again: Mexico's recent economic rollercoaster. Mexico City's changing economic structure. Decentralization: attempts to redress Mexico City's predominance 2. Urban Growth and the Appropriation of Space: from Plaza to Suburb to Megacity. Introduction: the growth of La region mas transparente. National demography and urban growth: Mexico City in perspective. Housing markets and intra urban mobility. The appropriation of space in the metropolitan area. The inner city 'problem' in Mexico City 3. The Politics of City Management: Defending the High Ground of Mexico's Federal District. The national political structure: who governs in Mexico? Government without democracy in Mexico City: defending the high ground. Conclusion: change to effect no change 4. Urban Land Use and Transportation. Urban land use and access to 'satisfiers'. Land use and access in Mexico City. Mexico City's transportation system 5. Planning in Mexico City: Decorative or Indicative? The structural impediments to physical planning. Planning initiatives in the metropolitan area. The status and authority of Mexico City's planning department, 1970 1990. Conclusion: planning for whose interest? 6. The Reproduction of Social Inequality: Access to Land, Services and Health Care in Mexico City. The housing and service provision bureaucracy in Mexico City. Reproducing social inequality through political mediation: access to land for illegal housing development in Mexico City. Reproducing social inequality through stratified delivery systems: health care in Mexico City. Reproducing social inequality through state community interaction. The paradox: improving or worsening social inequality in Mexico City? 7. $".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [319]-322) and index.".
- catalog extent "xxv, 332 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Mexico City.".
- catalog identifier "047197529X".
- catalog isFormatOf "Mexico City.".
- catalog isPartOf "World cities series".
- catalog issued "1998".
- catalog issued "c1998.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Chichester ; New York : J. Wiley,".
- catalog relation "Mexico City.".
- catalog spatial "Mexico City (Mexico) Economic conditions.".
- catalog spatial "Mexico City (Mexico) Politics and government.".
- catalog spatial "Mexico City (Mexico) Social conditions.".
- catalog spatial "Mexico Mexico City.".
- catalog subject "307.76/0972/53 21".
- catalog subject "City planning Mexico Mexico City.".
- catalog subject "HT169.M42 M498 1998".
- catalog subject "Urban ecology (Sociology) Mexico Mexico City.".
- catalog tableOfContents "1. The Paradox of Dominance yet Dependence: the Local in the National in the Global. Cities within a global system. From boom to bust and back again: Mexico's recent economic rollercoaster. Mexico City's changing economic structure. Decentralization: attempts to redress Mexico City's predominance 2. Urban Growth and the Appropriation of Space: from Plaza to Suburb to Megacity. Introduction: the growth of La region mas transparente. National demography and urban growth: Mexico City in perspective. Housing markets and intra urban mobility. The appropriation of space in the metropolitan area. The inner city 'problem' in Mexico City 3. The Politics of City Management: Defending the High Ground of Mexico's Federal District. The national political structure: who governs in Mexico? Government without democracy in Mexico City: defending the high ground. Conclusion: change to effect no change 4. Urban Land Use and Transportation. Urban land use and access to 'satisfiers'. Land use and access in Mexico City. Mexico City's transportation system 5. Planning in Mexico City: Decorative or Indicative? The structural impediments to physical planning. Planning initiatives in the metropolitan area. The status and authority of Mexico City's planning department, 1970 1990. Conclusion: planning for whose interest? 6. The Reproduction of Social Inequality: Access to Land, Services and Health Care in Mexico City. The housing and service provision bureaucracy in Mexico City. Reproducing social inequality through political mediation: access to land for illegal housing development in Mexico City. Reproducing social inequality through stratified delivery systems: health care in Mexico City. Reproducing social inequality through state community interaction. The paradox: improving or worsening social inequality in Mexico City? 7. $".
- catalog title "Mexico City / Peter M. Ward.".
- catalog type "text".