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ARGENTINA: Huge Loan to Flow into ‘Open Sewer’ River
By Marcela Valente*
BUENOS AIRES - Local residents and environmentalists are eyeing with cautious optimism a major loan from the World Bank to the Argentine government to clean up the Matanza-Riachuelo river that runs through Buenos Aires - the country's most polluted waterway.
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HEALTH-BRAZIL: Birth Centres vs. Hospitals
By Fabiana Frayssinet
RIO DE JANEIRO - The recent closure of a birth centre, which offered a more "human" touch with its focus on natural childbirth, in this Brazilian city revived the controversy over such practices, which have the backing of the Health Ministry but are opposed by the medical associations.
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MEXICO: Scientists and Communities Forge Eco-Alliances
By Verónica Díaz Favela*
MEXICO CITY - Graciela González answers phone calls, organises meetings and gives interviews as part of her work to save a river from ecological disaster. Thousands of kilometres away, farmer Gonzalo Rodríguez helps take air samples in a region polluted by petrochemicals.
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ARGENTINA: Out of the Frying Pan and Into the Engine
By Marcela Valente*
BUENOS AIRES - A town in Argentina has launched a programme that requires restaurants and other food producers to hand over their used vegetable oils to be distilled into biodiesel, which will be used to run the city's vehicles and public transportation.
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BRAZIL: Nature Paths Instead of Wall for Rio Slum
By Fabiana Frayssinet*
RIO DE JANEIRO - Representatives of the Rocinha slum and the Rio de Janeiro government have agreed to replace a high wall, intended to prevent this densely populated hillside neighbourhood from spilling into the forest, with ecological paths, parks and low walls.
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ARGENTINA: Drumming Up Black Awareness
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - Argentina’s small black community, ignored by historical constructions that have traditionally focused on the influence of European immigration, is now fighting for recognition of its contribution to culture in the Argentine capital.
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SOUTH KOREA: Schoolgirls at Forefront of Street Protests
By Jiyoung Leean
SEOUL - Hundreds of teenagers, many of them female, were out on the streets Wednesday demanding a public apology from the Lee Myung-bak government for the tragic death of former president Moo-hyun Roh, who committed suicide last month.
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EDUCATION-URUGUAY: Teaching Kids Forced to Grow Up Early
By Rogelio Bianchi
MONTEVIDEO - Tough and aggressive, 13-year-old José is a leader among his peers, and his classmates steer clear of him when he’s in a bad mood. When IPS visited his school in the Uruguayan capital, he wasn’t in his sixth-grade classroom with the rest of the students, but alone on the patio, which his head hanging down.
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DEVELOPMENT: Local Currencies Really Can Buy Happiness
By Matthew Cardinale*
ATLANTA, Georgia - In the face of an economic system which seems to be premised on environmental harm and profit-driven growth, a handful of communities across the U.S. and the globe have begun experimenting with alternative forms of local currency as a pathway to sustainability.
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EGYPT: ‘They Ogle, Touch, Use the Filthiest Language Imaginable’
By Cam McGrath
CAIRO - As night falls over Egypt’s capital, youth gather along the banks of the Nile where a carnivalesque atmosphere prevails.
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DEVELOPMENT-URUGUAY: Not Just Another Slum
By Raúl Pierri
MONTEVIDEO - Beat the odds: that was what the residents of El Monarca decided to do, in order to turn their informal settlement on the outskirts of the Uruguayan capital into a real neighbourhood, with all the necessary infrastructure and services.
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BRAZIL: Mixed Reviews for ‘Community Policing’ in Slums
By Fabiana Frayssinet
RIO DE JANEIRO - The police, who used to shoot first and ask questions later in Santa Marta, a Rio de Janeiro shantytown, are now getting on well with the local community – the result of a state government plan that nevertheless has drawn criticism.
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PERU: Microbusiness Helps Women Weather Crisis
By Blanca Rosales *
LIMA - Microenterprise is an escape valve for social tension at times of crisis, and microbusinesses do a better job of weathering the storm than bigger companies because they are used to overcoming difficulties – a positive effect that is further multiplied when it involves women.
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Half of the world population today lives in cities. That proportion reaches two-thirds in some countries, and urban dwellers around the globe face many of the same problems: poverty, homelessness, precarious housing, noise, inadequate sanitation and sewerage services, air and water pollution and deficient schools. Solutions cannot be achieved at the local or global levels without the active participation of city governments and residents. How do city dwellers confront their common problems? IPS tracks their pursuit of healthy and sustainable development of the urban environment, especially improving the lives of people who live in impoverished neighbourhoods.

IPS gratefully acknowledges the support of the City of Rome in realising this Bulletin 
News in RSS
US-INDIA: State Visit by Singh Could Smooth Bumpy Relations
PERU: Fighting Hunger with Native Crops
RIGHTS-CHAGOS: 'My Navel is Buried There'
GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
AFGHANISTAN: Insurgents Infiltrate Security Forces
LEBANON: Migrant Women Dying on the Job
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
CLIMATE CHANGE: Health at Risk
RIGHTS-MEXICO: State Held Responsible for Three Juárez Killings
POLITICS-BOTSWANA: I Lost the Election, But I Am a Winner
More >>

  UN-Habitat
  Global Urban Observatory
  Habitat International Coalition
  United Cities and Local Governments
  International Alliance of Inhabitants
  ICLEI Local Governments for Sustainabiity
  Cities Alliance, Cities Without Slums
  CHOIKE The Rights to Adequate Housing
  Shack / Slum Dwellers International

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