There are crucial relationships between global capitalist stagnation and volatility, neoliberal public policies, and uneven urban development that require explanation so as to develop appropriate progressive strategy. This is especially true in the water sector, where both rights discourses and global movement building are at advanced stages. On the one hand, the imposition of privatised urban water services is being challenged in many cities; on the other, though, ongoing pressure for commercialisation means that even after a multinational firm has left, the adverse implications of its reign may be durable. Johannesburg illustrates the problem.Working out contrasting discourses in political-economic analysis, as above, is crucial to any resolution of the problem in public policy via social struggle. see at : http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/law/elj/lgd/2008_1/bond/bond.pdf
Post Date : 29 Oktober 2008
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