International Development Research Centre (IDRC) Canada     
idrc.ca HOME > Publications > IDRC Books > All our books > THIRSTY CITIES
 Topic Explorer  
IDRC Books
     New
     in_focus
     Development/evaluation
     Economics
     Environment/biodiversity
     Food/agriculture
     Health
     IT/communication
     Natural resources
     Science/technology
     Social/political sciences
    All our books

IDRC's 40th anniversary

Subscribe

Free Online Books
 People
Bill Carman

ID: 9313
Added: 2002-09-09 15:47
Modified: 2007-11-30 11:36
Refreshed: 2010-03-14 05:13

Click here to get the URL for the RSS format file RSS format file

THIRSTY CITIES
Urban Environments and Water Supply in Latin America
Prev Book(s) 248 of 251 Next

666.JPG THIRSTY CITIES
Urban Environments and Water Supply in Latin America

Danilo J. Anton

IDRC 1993
ISBN Out of print
e-ISBN 1-55250-108-6
180 pp.

 Browse from this page Download e-book

Disponible en français / Disponible en español

Many cities in Latin America and the Caribbean are experiencing a water crisis as sources become exhausted or degraded. Urbanization, deteriorating infrastructures with a lack of funds for repairs, and inadequate polices are conspiring to cause water shortages.

People are becoming concentrated in megacities, such as Mexico City with a population of almost 23 million, that have outgrown their water-supply systems. Urban areas are increasingly incapable of supplying water and sewer systems for their populations. By the year 2020, more than 500 million inhabitants of Latin America (two-thirds of the population) will be living in cities of more than 100 000.

Water shortages are a complex issue of both supply and demand. In Thirsty Cities, author Danilo Anton provides pertinent geological and environmental information as he discusses surface and groundwater supplies and explores the many issues surrounding access to water in cities. He explains the significance of surface water contamination and the vulnerability of groundwater systems and provides a persuasive argument that the consequences of this situation may be catastrophic. He also outlines policies and investments that are needed to improve urban water supplies.

Latin America: The Thirsty Cities is a one-hour video that complements the book. It investigates water issues in four Latin American cities: Mexico City, Buenos Aires, Lima and Sao Paulo. The video is available through the National Film Board of Canada.

THE AUTHOR

Danilo J. Anton, a Uruguayan-Canadian geographer with over 25 years' experience in the environmental field, has managed research projects in more than 30 countries. His work has dealt with desertification problems of the Third World megalopolises, and the development of non-traditional water sources, such as snow and ice in Pakistan and coastal fogs in Chile and Peru. His most recent work, also published by IDRC, is Diversity, Globalization, and the Ways of Nature

Prev Book(s) 248 of 251 Next

 Document(s)

Chapter 1. Introduction 1995


Chapter 2. The Latin American environment 1995


Chapter 3. Environmental degradation and inadequate policies 1995


Chapter 4. Hydrological basins 1995


Chapter 5. Groundwater sources 1995


Chapter 6. Cities depending on surface water 1995


Chapter 7. Cities depending on both surface and underground water 1995


Chapter 8. Cities depending mainly on groundwater 1995


Chapter 9. Management of water resources 1995


Chapter 10. Sustainable development of water systems 1995


Chapter 11. Quenching the urban thirst 1995


References and Bibliography 1995


Glossary 1995


Index 1995




   guest (Read)(Ottawa)   Login Home|Careers|Copyright and Terms of Use|General Infomation|Contact Us|Low bandwidth