Fr. 36.50

Slow Harms and Citizen Action - Environmental Degradation and Policy Change in Latin American Cities

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Slow Harms and Citizen Action chronicles the struggle against toxic exposure in urban Latin America. By examining cities in Argentina, Colombia, and Peru, Veronica Herrera shows how local movements fighting for pollution remediation can ally with resourced outsiders for impactful change. Moreover, Herrera illustrates how the most successful environmental movements occurred in settings where established human rights movements had previously helped dismantle state-sponsored militarized violence. By unpacking human rights movements as thoroughfares for environmental activism, Slow Harms and Citizen Action sheds new light on the struggles for environmental justice in Latin America.

List of contents










  • Chapter 1: The Politics of Slow Harms in the Latin American City

  • Chapter 2: Slow Harms: Ubiquity and Invisibility in the Global South

  • Chapter 3: Expansive Policy Shifts in Argentina: The Power of Strong Bonds with Strong Bridges

  • Chapter 4: Stagnated Policy Shifts in Colombia: On Strong Bonds with Weak Bridges

  • Chapter 5: Uninitiated Policy Shifts in Peru: The Challenge of Weak Bonds with No Bridges

  • Chapter 6: Cities, Pollution, and Democracy

  • Bibliography

  • Index



About the author

Veronica Herrera is Associate Professor of Urban Planning and Political Science at the University of California, Los Angeles. She specializes in urban politics, environmental policy, and social mobilization, and is the author of the award-winning book, Water and Politics: Clientelism and Reform in Urban Mexico (University of Michigan Press, 2017). Herrera has served as a Postdoctoral Fellow with the Ford Foundation, the American Association of University Women, the Institute for Citizens and Scholars, and the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard. Her articles have been published in numerous outlets such as Perspectives on Politics, Comparative Politics, and World Development.

Summary

Environmental degradation is not new, yet the impact of pollution on human health and wellbeing is growing. According to the World Health Organization, 12.6 million people die annually from living or working near toxic pollution, amounting to one-quarter of global deaths. Ninety-two percent of these deaths occur in middle or low-income countries, where the majority of the global population lives. For the millions of communities around the world where pollution is a slow moving, long-standing problem, residents born into toxic exposure often perceive pollution as part of the everyday landscape, particularly in low-resource settings. Local communities may also be both victims of pollution and complicit in perpetrating it themselves. When and how do people mobilize around slow harms? Moreover, when does citizen action around slow harms unlock policy action?

In Slow Harms and Citizen Action, Veronica Herrera chronicles the struggle against toxic exposure in urban Latin America. Comparing advocacy movements for river pollution remediation in the capital regions of Argentina, Colombia, and Peru, Herrera explains how citizen-led efforts helped create environmental governance through networks that included impacted communities (bonding mobilization) and resourced allies (bridging mobilization). Through bonding and bridging mobilization, citizen advocacy for slow harms activated the state's regulatory capacity. Moreover, Herrera illustrates how the most successful environmental movements occurred in settings where established human rights movements had previously helped dismantle state-sponsored militarized violence. By unpacking human rights movements as thoroughfares for environmental activism, Slow Harms and Citizen Action sheds new light on the struggles for environmental justice in Latin America.

Additional text

In this pathbreaking study of river pollution on the poor fringes of Bogotá, Lima, and Buenos Aires, Herrera shows how these invisible and creeping harms and the marginalization of residents act as obstacles to grassroots mobilization, and how broader human rights activist networks shape institutional responses when these obstacles are overcome. Drawing novel links between histories of political violence and contemporary environmental mobilization, Slow Harms and Citizen Action illuminates divergent trajectories of contemporary urban politics in Latin America.

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