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Kicking Off the Bootstraps: Environment, Development, and Community Power in
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Kicking Off the Bootstraps: Environment, Development, and Community Power in Puerto Rico (Society, Environment, and Place) Paperback - 2000

by Berman Santana, Déborah

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  • Title Kicking Off the Bootstraps: Environment, Development, and Community Power in Puerto Rico (Society, Environment, and Place)
  • Author Berman Santana, Déborah
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition Illustrated
  • Condition Used - Good
  • Pages 212
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher University of Arizona Press, Tucson, Arizona, U.S.A.
  • Date 2000-09
  • Features Bibliography, Illustrated, Index, Maps, Table of Contents
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 0816515913.G
  • ISBN 9780816515912
  • Themes
    • Cultural Region: Caribbean

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From the jacket flap

While small communities in Third World countries usually seem at the mercy of central governments and foreign capitalists, local activists can help exploited peoples correct environmental abuses and social injustices and seize control of their own destinies. "Kicking Off the Bootstraps" is a powerful case history of such an effort. It describes a grassroots activist movement that emerged in the Puerto Rican community of Salinas to counter the poverty and economic dependence experienced by its citizens in the wake of "Operation Bootstrap," a post-World War II industrial development program. DA(c)borah Berman Santana examines the efforts of the community to develop its own economic strategy based primarily on environmentally and socially responsible uses of local natural and human resources. Berman Santana shows how local activists are seeking to empower the Salinas community to make decisions concerning economic development. She evaluates present-day efforts to develop positive alternatives, examining the motivations of the activists, the nature of their projects, their efforts to mobilize the community, their dealings with government and other organizations, and the obstacles they face. In a closing chapter, she addresses the potential roles of community leaders, outside activists, local businesses, and government in actualizing these alternatives. A testimony to one community's efforts to determine its own future, "Kicking Off the Bootstraps" deals with real issues such as control over productive resources, quality of life, and environmental health. It also extends an examination of community-directed activism to an exploration of policy implications for sustainable development. Whilethis concept is often too vague to be applied to real strategies, the Salinas experience provides a clear idea of what sustainable development can--and should--mean in actual practice.

About the author

Dborah Berman Santana is an assistant professor of geography and planning at the State University of New York at Albany, where she has created and taught courses on development theory, environmentalism, Latin America, and the Caribbean.