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05291nam a2200421 a 4500 |
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1893036 |
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20171111234722.0 |
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030130s2000 njua ob 001 0 eng d |
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|a 1400813786
|q (electronic bk.)
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|a 9781400813780
|q (electronic bk.)
|z 0691050147
|q (cloth ;
|q alk. paper)
|z 128276716X
|z 9781282767164
|z 9781400823895
|z 1400823897
|q (cloth ;
|q alk. paper)
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040 |
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|a N$T
|b eng
|e pn
|z 9780691050140
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050 |
|
4 |
|a HN49.C6
|b W437 2000eb
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100 |
1 |
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|a Weinberg, Adam S.
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245 |
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|a Urban recycling and the search for sustainable community development /
|c Adam S. Weinberg, David N. Pellow, and Allan Schnaiberg.
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260 |
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|a Princeton, N.J. :
|b Princeton University Press,
|c ©2000.
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300 |
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|a 1 online resource (x, 225 pages) :
|b illustrations
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504 |
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|a Includes bibliographical references (pages 203-215) and index.
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505 |
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|a Cover13; -- Contents13; -- Acknowledgments -- One Urban Recycling: An Empirical Test of Sustainable Community Development Proposals -- Sustainable Community Development -- Recycling as a Case Study in Sustainable Community Development -- The Rise of Recycling: 8220;Why Waste a Resource?8221; -- Contemporary Recycling Practices -- The Chicago Region as a Locale for Examining Recycling and Sustainable Community Development -- Two The Challenge to Achieve Sustainable Community Development: A Theoretical Framework -- The Treadmill of Production as a Modern Political-Economic Model -- Conflict, Power, and Dialectics: A Political Economy Perspective -- Allocating Scarcity: A Central Parameter -- Political Consciousness in the Managed Scarcity Synthesis -- The Treadmill of Production and Recycling: Overt and Covert Conflicts -- Limitations of Our Analysis -- Three Chicagos Municipally Based Recycling Program: Origins and Outcomes of a Corporate-Centered Approach -- Who Is Riding the Tiger? The Alliance between the City of Chicago and Waste Management, Incorporated -- Promises and Pitfalls of the Blue Bag Program -- Early Problems with the Blue Bag: Miscalculating Start-up Costs and Recovery Rates -- Occupational Safety Issues: Challenges and Responses -- Reclaiming the MRRFs: Chicagos Attempt to Regain Control -- Conclusion: The Blue Bag Program and the Three Es of Sustainable Community Development -- Four Community-Based Recycling: The Struggles of a Social Movement -- Community-Based Recycling Centers -- The Model for Community-Based Recycling Centers: The Resource Center -- Replicating the Resource Center: Uptown Recycling, Incorporated -- Limitations of the Community-Based Model -- Social Movement Struggles in a Global Marketplace: The Demise of Community-Based Recycling? -- Moving toward the Three Es: Assessing the Achievements of the Community-Based Centers -- Community-Based Sustainable Development Enterprises: 8220;Doing Good but Not Doing Well8221; -- Five Industrial Recycling Zones and Parks: Creating Alternative Recycling Models -- Environmental Movements and Industrial Ecology: The Logic of Recycling Parks and Recycling Zones -- Promises in Maywood -- Reviving West Garfield Park: The Bethel New Life Story -- Resistance to Innovations: DuPage County and Gary, Indiana -- Planning for Industrial Recycling Zones: Is Ecological Modernization in Our Future? -- Six Social Linkage Programs: Recycling Practices in Evanston -- Finding Alternatives: The Road to Locating the Three Es -- Recycling Working as a Social Linkage: The Rise of the PIC Program in Evanston -- Delinking the Evanston Program: The New 8220;Bottom Line8221; Orientation to Local Recycling -- Understanding the Dimensions of Variability in Recycling Programs -- Searching for Sustainable Development: Do Technology and Scale Matter? -- Seven The Treadmill of Production: Toward a Political-Economic Grounding of Sustainable Community Development -- Revisiting the Treadmill of Production -- The Globalizing Treadmill -- The States Ambivalent Role in Managing the Treadmill -- Grounding Sustainable Community Development in the Treadmill of Production -- Conclusion: Relationships in the Treadmill -- Eight The Search for Sustainable Community Development: Final Notes and Thoughts -- The Political Economy of Solid Waste Management -- Critical Social Science: Power, Education, Community, and Politics -- The Economic Geography of Waste: Generalizing beyond Chicago and beyond Recycling -- Final Reflections -- T$27671.
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650 |
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|a Community development.
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650 |
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0 |
|a Sustainable development.
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650 |
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0 |
|a Recycling (Waste, etc.)
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650 |
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4 |
|a Environmental Studies.
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650 |
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4 |
|a Social Science.
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650 |
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6 |
|a Développement communautaire.
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650 |
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6 |
|a Développement durable.
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650 |
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6 |
|a Recyclage (Déchets, etc.)
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650 |
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7 |
|a POLITICAL SCIENCE
|x Public Policy
|x City Planning & Urban Development.
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650 |
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7 |
|a Community development.
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650 |
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7 |
|a Recycling (Waste, etc.)
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650 |
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7 |
|a Sustainable development.
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650 |
1 |
7 |
|a Opbouwwerk.
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650 |
1 |
7 |
|a Duurzame ontwikkeling.
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650 |
1 |
7 |
|a Afvalverwerking.
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650 |
1 |
7 |
|a Sociaal-economische ontwikkeling.
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651 |
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7 |
|a Chicago (Ill.)
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700 |
1 |
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|a Pellow, David N.,
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856 |
4 |
0 |
|a Schnaiberg, Allan.
|u http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=75321
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952 |
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|a CY-NiOUC
|b 5a0464796c5ad14ac1eeb464
|c 998a
|d 945l
|e -
|t 1
|x m
|z Books
|