722 resultados para Local public cost


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The modern food system and sustainable development form a conceptual combination that suggests sustainability deficits in environmental impacts and nutritional status of western populations. This study explores actors orientations towards sustainability by probing into social dynamics for sustainability within primary production and public consumption. If actors within these two worlds were to express converging orientations for sustainability, the system dynamics of the market would enable more sustainable growth in terms of production dictated by consumption. The study is based on a constructivist research approach with qualitative text analyses. The findings were validated by internal and external food system actors and are suggested to represent current social dynamics within Finnish food system. The key findings included primary producers social skilfulness, which enabled networking with other actors in very different paths of life, learning in order to promote one s trade, and trusting reflectively in partners in order to expand business. These activities extended the supply chain in a spiral fashion by horizontal and vertical forward integration, until large retailers were met for negotiations on a more equal basis. This mode of chain level coordination, typically building around the core of social and partnership relations, was coined as a socially overlaid network, and seen as sustainable coordination mode for endogenous growth. The caterers exhibited more or less committed professional identity for sustainability within their reach. The facilitating approaches for professional identities dealt successfully with local and organic food in addition to domestic food, and also imported food. The co-operation with supply chains created innovative solutions and savings for the business parties to be shared. There were also more complicated identities as juggling, critical and delimited approaches for sustainability, with less productive efforts due to restrictions such as absence of organisational sustainability strategy, weak presence of local and organic suppliers, limited understanding about sustainability and no organisational resources for informed choices for sustainability. The convergence between producers and caterers existed to an extent allowing suggestion that increased clarity about sustainable consumption and production by actors could be constructed using advanced tools. The study looks for introduction of more profound environmental and socio-economic knowledge through participatory research with supply chain actors. Learning in the workplace about food system reality in terms of supply chain co-operation may prove to be a change engine that leads to advanced network operations and a more sustainable food system.

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Abstract The modern food system and sustainable development form a conceptual combination that suggests sustainability deficits in the ways we deal with food consumption and production - in terms of economic relations, environmental impacts and nutritional status of western population. This study explores actors’ orientations towards sustainability by taking into account actors’ embedded positions within structures of the food system, actors’ economic relations and views about sustainability as well as their possibilities for progressive activities. The study looks particularly at social dynamics for sustainability within primary production and public consumption. If actors within these two worlds were to express converging orientations for sustainability, the system dynamics of the market would enable more sustainable growth in terms of production dictated by consumption. The study is based on a constructivist research approach with qualitative text analyses. The data consisted of three text corpora, the ‘local food corpus’, the ‘catering corpus’ and the ‘mixed corpus’. The local food actors were interviewed about their economic exchange relations. The caterers’ interviews dealt with their professional identity for sustainability. Finally, the mixed corpus assembled a dialogue as a participatory research approach, which was applied in order to enable researcher and caterer learning about the use of organic milk in public catering. The data were analysed for theoretically conceptualised relations, expressing behavioural patterns in actors’ everyday work as interpreted by the researcher. The findings were corroborated by the internal and external communities of food system actors. The interpretations have some validity, although they only present abstractions of everyday life and its rich, even opaque, fabric of meanings and aims. The key findings included primary producers’ social skilfulness, which enabled networking with other actors in very different paths of life, learning in order to promote one’s trade, and trusting reflectively in partners in order to extend business. These activities expanded the supply chain in a spiral fashion by horizontal and vertical forward integration, until large retailers were met for negotiations on a more equal or ‘other regarding’ basis. This kind of chain level coordination, typically building around the core of social and partnership relations, was coined as a socially overlaid network. It supported market access of local farmers, rooted in their farms, who were able to draw on local capital and labour in promotion of competitive business; the growth was endogenous. These kinds of chains – one conventional and one organic – were different from the strategic chain, which was more profit based and while highly competitive, presented exogenous growth as it depended on imported capital and local employees. However, the strategic chain offered learning opportunities and support for the local economy. The caterers exhibited more or less committed professional identity for sustainability within their reach. The facilitating and balanced approaches for professional identities dealt successfully with local and organic food in addition to domestic food, and also imported food. The co-operation with supply chains created innovative solutions and savings for the business parties to be shared. The rule-abiding approach for sustainability only made choices among organic supply chains without extending into co-operation with actors. There were also more complicated and troubled identities as juggling, critical and delimited approaches for sustainability, with less productive efforts due to restrictions such as absence of organisational sustainability strategy, weak presence of local and organic suppliers, limited understanding about sustainability and no organisational resources to develop changes towards a sustainable food system. Learning in the workplace about food system reality in terms of supply chain co-operation may prove to be a change engine that leads to advanced network operations and a more sustainable food system. The convergence between primary producers and caterers existed to an extent allowing suggestion that increased clarity about sustainable consumption and production by actors could be approached using advanced tools. The study looks for introduction of more profound environmental and socio-economic knowledge through participatory research with supply chain actors in order to promote more sustainable food systems. Summary of original publications and the authors’ contribution I Mikkola, M. & Seppänen, L. 2006. Farmers’ new participation in food chains: making horizontal and vertical progress by networking. In: Langeveld, H. & Röling N. (Eds.). Changing European farming systems for a better future. New visions for rural areas. Wageningen, The Netherlands. Wageningen Academic Publishers: 267–271. II Mikkola, M. 2008. Coordinative structures and development of food supply chains. British Food Journal 110 (2): 189–205. III Mikkola, M. 2009. Shaping professional identity for sustainability. Evidence in Finnish public catering. Appetite 53 (1): 56–65. IV Mikkola, M. 2009. Catering for sustainability: building a dialogue on organic milk. Agronomy Research 7 (Special issue 2): 668–676. Minna Mikkola has been responsible for developing the generic research frame, particular research questions, the planning and collection of the data, their qualitative analysis and writing the articles I, II, III and IV. Dr Laura Seppänen has contributed to the development of the generic research frame and article I by introducing the author to the basic concepts of economic sociology and by supporting the writing of article II with her critical comments. Articles are printed with permission from the publishers.

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Structure comparison tools can be used to align related protein structures to identify structurally conserved and variable regions and to infer functional and evolutionary relationships. While the conserved regions often superimpose well, the variable regions appear non superimposable. Differences in homologous protein structures are thought to be due to evolutionary plasticity to accommodate diverged sequences during evolution. One of the kinds of differences between 3-D structures of homologous proteins is rigid body displacement. A glaring example is not well superimposed equivalent regions of homologous proteins corresponding to a-helical conformation with different spatial orientations. In a rigid body superimposition, these regions would appear variable although they may contain local similarity. Also, due to high spatial deviation in the variable region, one-to-one correspondence at the residue level cannot be determined accurately. Another kind of difference is conformational variability and the most common example is topologically equivalent loops of two homologues but with different conformations. In the current study, we present a refined view of the ``structurally variable'' regions which may contain local similarity obscured in global alignment of homologous protein structures. As structural alphabet is able to describe local structures of proteins precisely through Protein Blocks approach, conformational similarity has been identified in a substantial number of `variable' regions in a large data set of protein structural alignments; optimal residue-residue equivalences could be achieved on the basis of Protein Blocks which led to improved local alignments. Also, through an example, we have demonstrated how the additional information on local backbone structures through protein blocks can aid in comparative modeling of a loop region. In addition, understanding on sequence-structure relationships can be enhanced through our approach. This has been illustrated through examples where the equivalent regions in homologous protein structures share sequence similarity to varied extent but do not preserve local structure.

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The constant increase in the number of solved protein structures is of great help in understanding the basic principles behind protein folding and evolution. 3-D structural knowledge is valuable in designing and developing methods for comparison, modelling and prediction of protein structures. These approaches for structure analysis can be directly implicated in studying protein function and for drug design. The backbone of a protein structure favours certain local conformations which include alpha-helices, beta-strands and turns. Libraries of limited number of local conformations (Structural Alphabets) were developed in the past to obtain a useful categorization of backbone conformation. Protein Block (PB) is one such Structural Alphabet that gave a reasonable structure approximation of 0.42 angstrom. In this study, we use PB description of local structures to analyse conformations that are preferred sites for structural variations and insertions, among group of related folds. This knowledge can be utilized in improving tools for structure comparison that work by analysing local structure similarities. Conformational differences between homologous proteins are known to occur often in the regions comprising turns and loops. Interestingly, these differences are found to have specific preferences depending upon the structural classes of proteins. Such class-specific preferences are mainly seen in the all-beta class with changes involving short helical conformations and hairpin turns. A test carried out on a benchmark dataset also indicates that the use of knowledge on the class specific variations can improve the performance of a PB based structure comparison approach. The preference for the indel sites also seem to be confined to a few backbone conformations involving beta-turns and helix C-caps. These are mainly associated with short loops joining the regular secondary structures that mediate a reversal in the chain direction. Rare beta-turns of type I' and II' are also identified as preferred sites for insertions.

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The high level of public accountability attached to Public Sector Enterprises as a result of public ownership makes them socially responsible. The Committee of Public Undertakings in 1992 examined the issue relating to social obligations of Central Public Sector Enterprises and observed that ``being part of the `State', every Public Sector enterprise has a moral responsibility to play an active role in discharging the social obligations endowed on a welfare state, subject to the financial health of the enterprise''. It issued the Corporate Social Responsibility Guidelines in 2010 where all Central Public Enterprises, through a Board Resolution, are mandated to create a CSR budget as a specified percentage of net profit of the previous year. This paper examines the CSR activities of the biggest engineering public sector organization in India, Bharath Heavy Electricals Limited. The objectives are twofold, one, to develop a case study of the organization about the funds allocated and utilized for various CSR activities, and two, to examine its status with regard to other organizations, the 2010 guidelines, and the local socio-economic development. Secondary data analysis results show three interesting trends. One, it reveals increasing organizational social orientation with the formal guidelines in place. Two, Firms can no longer continue to exploit environmental resources and escape from their responsibilities by acting separate entities regardless of the interest of the society and Three the thrust of CSR in public sector is on inclusive growth, sustainable development and capacity building with due attention to the socio-economic needs of the neglected and marginalized sections of the society.

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[ES] Los responsables políticos y los gestores de los gobiernos locales de las ciudades se enfrentan con un problema recurrente: cómo atender, con recursos cada vez más escasos, las demandas de sus ciudadanos y a los actores con interés en su territorio, en términos tanto de eficacia en la prestación de servicios como de profundización democrática. Utilizando una metodología cualitativa, el objetivo de este trabajo es identificar hasta que punto un proceso de planificación estratégica pública sirve para compatibilizar las demandas de democracia y eficacia en el gobierno y administración pública local, involucrando a los ciudadanos y a los actores económicos privados. Este estudio de caso demuestra esa posibilidad aunque se hacen necesarias investigaciones comparativas adicionales.

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Two common goals of this meeting are to arrest the effects of sea level rise and other phenomena caused by Greenhouse Gases from anthropogenic sources ("GHG",) and to mitigate the effects. The fundamental questions are: (1) how to get there and (2) who should shoulder the cost? Given Washington gridlock, states, NGO's and citizens such as the Inupiat of the Village of Kivalina have turned to the courts for solutions. Current actions for public nuisance seek (1) to reduce and eventually eliminate GHG emissions, (2) damages for health effects and property damage—plus hundreds of millions in dollars spent to prepare for the foregoing. The U.S. Court of Appeals just upheld the action against the generators of some 10% of the CO2 emissions from human activities in the U.S., clearing the way for a trial featuring the state of the art scientific linkage between GHG production and the effects of global warming. Climate change impacts on coastal regions manifest most prominently through sea level rise and its impacts: beach erosion, loss of private and public structures, relocation costs, loss of use and accompanying revenues (e.g. tourism), beach replenishment and armoring costs, impacts of flooding during high water events, and loss of tax base. Other effects may include enhanced storm frequency and intensity, increased insurance risks and costs, impacts to water supplies, fires and biological changes through invasions or local extinctions (IPCC AR4, 2007; Okmyung, et al., 2007). There is an increasing urgency for federal and state governments to focus on the local and regional levels and consistently provide the information, tools, and methods necessary for adaptation. Calls for action at all levels acknowledge that a viable response must engage federal, state and local expertise, perspectives, and resources in a coordinated and collaborative effort. A workshop held in December 2000 on coastal inundation and sea level rise proposes a shared framework that can help guide where investments should be made to enable states and local governments to assess impacts and initiate adaptation strategies over the next decade. (PDF contains 5 pages)

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Currently completing its fifth year, the Coastal Waccamaw Stormwater Education Consortium (CWSEC) helps northeastern South Carolina communities meet National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) Phase II permit requirements for Minimum Control Measure 1 - Public Education and Outreach - and Minimum Control Measure 2 - Public Involvement. Coordinated by Coastal Carolina University, six regional organizations serve as core education providers to eight coastal localities including six towns and cities and two large counties. CWSEC recently finished a needs assessment to begin the process of strategizing for the second NPDES Phase II 5-year permit cycle in order to continue to develop and implement effective, results-oriented stormwater education and outreach programs to meet federal requirements and satisfy local environmental and economic needs. From its conception in May 2004, CWSEC set out to fulfill new federal Clean Water Act requirements associated with the NPDES Phase II Stormwater Program. Six small municipal separate storm sewer systems (MS4s) located within the Myrtle Beach Urbanized Area endorsed a coordinated approach to regional stormwater education, and participated in a needs assessment resulting in a Regional Stormwater Education Strategy and a Phased Education Work Plan. In 2005, CWSEC was formally established and the CWSEC’s Coordinator was hired. The Coordinator, who is also the Environmental Educator at Coastal Carolina University’s Waccamaw Watershed Academy, organizes six regional agencies who serve as core education providers for eight coastal communities. The six regional agencies working as core education providers to the member MS4s include Clemson Public Service and Carolina Clear Program, Coastal Carolina University’s Waccamaw Watershed Academy, Murrells Inlet 2020, North Inlet-Winyah Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve’s Coastal Training and Public Education Programs, South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium, and Winyah Rivers Foundation’s Waccamaw Riverkeeper®. CWSEC’s organizational structure results in a synergy among the education providers, achieving greater productivity than if each provider worked separately. The member small MS4s include City of Conway, City of North Myrtle Beach, City of Myrtle Beach, Georgetown County, Horry County, Town of Atlantic Beach, Town of Briarcliffe Acres, and Town of Surfside Beach. Each MS4 contributes a modest annual fee toward the salary of the Coordinator and operational costs. (PDF contains 3 pages)

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As coastal destinations continue to grow, due to tourism and residential expansion, the demand for public beach access and related amenities will also increase. As a resultagencies that provide beach access and related amenities face challenges when considering both residents and visitors use beaches and likely possess different needs, as well as different preferences for management decisions. Being a resident of a coastal county provides more opportunity to use local beaches, but coastal tourism is an important and growing economic engine in coastal communities (Kriesel, Landry, & Keeler, 2005; Pogue & Lee, 1999). Therefore, providing agencies with a comprehensive assessment of the differences between these two groups will increase the likelihood of effective management programs and policies for the provision of public beach access and related amenities. The purpose of this paper was to use a stated preference choice method (SPCM) to identify the extent of both residents’ and visitors’ preferences for public beach management options. (PDF contains 4 pages)

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In noncooperative cost sharing games, individually strategic agents choose resources based on how the welfare (cost or revenue) generated at each resource (which depends on the set of agents that choose the resource) is distributed. The focus is on finding distribution rules that lead to stable allocations, which is formalized by the concept of Nash equilibrium, e.g., Shapley value (budget-balanced) and marginal contribution (not budget-balanced) rules.

Recent work that seeks to characterize the space of all such rules shows that the only budget-balanced distribution rules that guarantee equilibrium existence in all welfare sharing games are generalized weighted Shapley values (GWSVs), by exhibiting a specific 'worst-case' welfare function which requires that GWSV rules be used. Our work provides an exact characterization of the space of distribution rules (not necessarily budget-balanced) for any specific local welfare functions remains, for a general class of scalable and separable games with well-known applications, e.g., facility location, routing, network formation, and coverage games.

We show that all games conditioned on any fixed local welfare functions possess an equilibrium if and only if the distribution rules are equivalent to GWSV rules on some 'ground' welfare functions. Therefore, it is neither the existence of some worst-case welfare function, nor the restriction of budget-balance, which limits the design to GWSVs. Also, in order to guarantee equilibrium existence, it is necessary to work within the class of potential games, since GWSVs result in (weighted) potential games.

We also provide an alternative characterization—all games conditioned on any fixed local welfare functions possess an equilibrium if and only if the distribution rules are equivalent to generalized weighted marginal contribution (GWMC) rules on some 'ground' welfare functions. This result is due to a deeper fundamental connection between Shapley values and marginal contributions that our proofs expose—they are equivalent given a transformation connecting their ground welfare functions. (This connection leads to novel closed-form expressions for the GWSV potential function.) Since GWMCs are more tractable than GWSVs, a designer can tradeoff budget-balance with computational tractability in deciding which rule to implement.

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A fast and reliable phase unwrapping (PhU) algorithm, based on the local quality-guided fitting plane, is presented. Its framework depends on the basic plane-approximated assumption for phase values of local pixels and on the phase derivative variance (PDV) quality map. Compared with other existing popular unwrapping algorithms, the proposed algorithm demonstrated improved robustness and immunity to strong noise and high phase variations, given that the plane assumption for local phase is reasonably satisfied. Its effectiveness is demonstrated by computer-simulated and experimental results.

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Esta tese investiga as memórias e experiências de duas gerações de moradores de uma localidade da periferia urbana de Florianópolis, cidade cujo crescimento nas últimas décadas tem sido acompanhado pelo aumento dos espaços de pobreza. A pesquisa com os atores sociais aqui investigados permitiu vislumbrar os mecanismos que operaram a mudança das relações de sociabilidade de seus moradores e em suas práticas de inserção na vida urbana, que transitaram, ao longo do período, da organização coletiva (na época em que constituíam o movimento sem-teto) para a melhoria de suas condições de vida às estratégias individuais. A premissa é que as experiências dessas duas gerações podem ser mais bem compreendidas se analisadas na articulação do nível local com a esfera pública da cidade. Para tanto são analisados o desenvolvimento urbano recente de Florianópolis, a produção de seus espaços de pobreza e a dinâmica conflitiva daí advinda, bem como a percepção deles sobre seu espaço, tomando como referência as categorias a partir das quais esse espaço foi por eles historicamente elaborado. Neste processo, construíram um idioma de ação no qual a categoria comunidade teve grande centralidade. A investigação foi desenvolvida por meio de uma metodologia baseada em entrevistas e, principalmente, a partir da observação direta, realizada ao longo de atividades de pesquisa e de extensão como professor da universidade. Com relação à primeira geração, a tese evidencia como a memória ressignifica no presente as experiências de participação política vivenciadas no passado. As análises revelam como essa ressignificação se relaciona com deslocamentos no sentido do político, os quais estão relacionados às mudanças nas condições de vida moradores e ao novo lugar simbólico ocupado pelas localidades de periferia de Florianópolis. Com relação à segunda geração, a investigação demonstra em que medida se distingue da anterior na sua forma de inserção no mundo da cidade, examinando tanto o campo de possibilidades que a eles se abre quanto seus projetos e escolhas. Enquanto a primeira geração desenvolveu no passado intensas práticas associativas, percebeu-se na nova geração a desvalorização dos espaços de articulação coletiva e o enfraquecimento dos laços de sociabilidade no plano local da comunidade. Suas trajetórias de vida, que tiveram como ponto em comum a participação em projetos socioeducativos, revelaram uma inserção diferenciada tanto no mercado de trabalho como na vida da cidade, o que fica bastante evidente quando comparados com outros jovens do bairro, que convivem com o desemprego e com a dinâmica da violência. A participação em projetos socioeducativos e o ingresso em estágios para iniciação ao trabalho, além de proporcionar outra integração com a vida da cidade, fez com que desenvolvessem novos laços na localidade. Em tal contexto, o fortalecimento de laços locais, quando ocorre, pode ser entendido como resistência a uma inserção cada vez mais individualizada no social.

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A Constituição Federal de 1988 garante o direito à saúde no Brasil a todos os brasileiros. Para assegurar esse direito constitucional foi instituído através das Leis ns 8080/90 e 8142/90, o Sistema Único de Saúde (SUS), organização de direito público que normatiza toda a prestação de assistência à saúde da população. O SUS, constituído a partir de diretrizes filosóficas, garante assistência universal e gratuita em todas as áreas do setor saúde. Incorporado ao SUS através da Política Nacional de Medicamentos e depois pela Política Nacional de Assistência Farmacêutica, o acesso a medicamentos é um setor estratégico da política pública de saúde. A judicialização do acesso à saúde e à assistência farmacêutica, que se converteu em recurso necessário para garantir o direito à saúde no Brasil, é hoje um importante componente da gestão municipal de saúde. Trata-se de um processo que se inicia com a aquisição de medicamentos para tratar o HIV/Aids na década de 1990. Este trabalho realizou uma pesquisa, de caráter exploratório, no município de Saquarema, que permitiu construir uma análise (qualitativa e quantitativa) das ordens judiciais, procedentes da Defensoria Pública da Comarca de Saquarema para aquisição de medicamentos, entre 01/01/2011 e 31/12/2012, totalizando 106 demandas, a partir de prescrições médicas individuais feitas por profissionais do SUS. A pesquisa constatou que a hipossuficiência de recursos e a urgência dos autores das ações são os principais respaldos das decisões judiciais. Ela também observou que a maioria dos requerentes é do gênero feminino, com idade acima de 61 anos, com patologias crônicas e fazendo uso contínuo de medicamentos. Esses medicamentos foram prescritos por quatro profissionais médicos oriundos de quatro especialidades (oftalmologia, cardiologia, endocrinologia e pediatria) e representam 60% das demandas judiciais. A situação de conflito pesquisada mostra que o direito à saúde está sendo exercido através do Poder Judiciário, com uma Defensoria Pública relativamente eficiente, atendendo a uma população com poucos recursos econômicos, que faz uso de medicamentos para tratamento de doenças crônicas e degenerativas. A prescrição médica individual é o documento necessário para requisitar os medicamentos de uso contínuo. A pesquisa, após analisar os principais resultados, aponta algumas alternativas, chamadas de ações defensivas, que as gestões municipais de saúde em Saquarema e outras municipalidades podem adotar.

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O tema que nos propomos a estudar é o Poder local, cidadania e participação popular no município de Maricá. A delimitação espaço temporal de nosso projeto situa-se na cidade de Maricá, localizada na Sub-região dos Lagos, no Estado do Rio de Janeiro, a partir do ano de 2009, tendo como pano de fundo as especificidades da formação social brasileira e as determinações estruturais resultantes da mundialização do capital. É importante ressaltar que o termo participação popular pertinente a este estudo refere-se à criação ou ampliação de canais institucionais para intervenção da população no controle social ou na construção do debate orçamentário nas cidades, que exigem estratégias políticas que são absolutamente fundamentais para a construção de uma nova sociedade pautada em princípios radicalmente democráticos.As contradições e as possibilidades da luta pelo direito à cidade, frente à ampliação mercantilização do espaço e a tradição clientelista na cidade de Maricá, foram os desafios que procuraremos responder nesta tese. Para tal, elencamos as seguintes hipóteses: 1) a disputa de projetos societários, a partir da luta de classes, pode ser identificada nas cidades através das propostas antagônicas de cidade-mercadoria e do direito à cidade, contradições estas que se reproduzem inclusive em governos municipais comprometidos com a ampliação dos canais de participação popular; 2) a gestão participativa municipal pode tanto contribuir para a subjetivação das classes subalternas no sentido das mesmas intervirem e até modificarem a esfera pública, quanto se tornar um espaço instrumental ao clientelismo e/ou associativismo local; 3) para evitar tal distorção é importante que agentes contestatórios da sociedade civil retomem o tensionamento de canais institucionais de participação popular nas cidades, enquanto estratégia de ampliação da esfera pública, visto que tais espaços têm sido ocupados por agentes muito mais colaborativos que conflituosos, despolitizando possibilidades, tais como: o orçamento participativo, audiências públicas e os Conselhos Municipais; 4) as cidades do CONLESTE, em especial o município de Maricá, tornaram-se foco do interesse da burguesia nacional e internacional, após as discussões em torno do COMPERJ e do Pré-sal, dificultando e/ou inviabilizado um direcionamento autônomo do poder local em torno das propostas engendradas pela participação popular na cidade, contexto que torna o urgente o tensionamento visando à possibilidade de garantia da função social da cidade, conforme preconiza a Carta Mundial de Direito à Cidade, em especial frente à especulação imobiliária.