Web database of sustainable settlements and neighbourhoods

BBSR publication: How the New Urban Agenda affects cities worldwide

Issue 3 of the journal IzR on sustainable urban development

Four days, more than 30,000 participants, 167 states, numerous lectures, workshops and exhibitions: Habitat III, the World Summit on Human Settlements hosted by the United Nations in autumn 2016, was a major event. The result is the New Urban Agenda, a new global action programme for urban development. But where does it go from here? The current issue of the journal "Information on Spatial Development" (IzR), published by the Federal Institute for Research on Building, Urban Affairs and Spatial Development (BBSR), answers this question.

In their contributions, scientists, planners and employees from cities and ministries, as well as other practitioners, look at the agenda that is considered the global roadmap for cities in the next 20 years. It calls for a lot: compact settlements and adequate open spaces, an economical use of resources, better developed public transport and affordable housing. But above all, it calls for a new culture of cooperation between state and city levels, both nationally and internationally.

The authors show how states and cities can implement the goals formulated in the Agenda and make them measurable. In case studies, they present different approaches and development statuses: The focus is on German cities such as Stuttgart or Bonn as well as countries such as Brazil, India, Iran, China, the Netherlands and the USA. The articles are supplemented by infographics on global urban development.

"As successful as the Habitat III conference was, the need for action is clear. The real work and the challenges arise on the ground. Worldwide," says BBSR expert Dr. Karl Peter Schön, who was a technical co-author of the New Urban Agenda together with his colleague Dr. André Müller. "Cities have a central role to play in this. They are engines of economic progress as well as drivers of social transformation and integration. If cities do not develop sustainably, the global community will not achieve its climate and energy goals."

The importance of the topics discussed worldwide is also reflected in the fact that many international authors have contributed to the issue. They deal with complex questions: What impulses does the New Urban Agenda provide? How can cities work better together internationally? Can the different needs of cities be defined in terms of global target values? What will urban mobility look like in the future? And what will lead to better living conditions in cities?

The booklet entitled "The New Urban Agenda - Consequences for Urban Development" is published by Franz Steiner Verlag. A reading sample and background information on the authors can be found on the BBSR website:
www.bbsr.bund.de/...IzR/2017/3/Inhalt/inhalt.html

 


Keywords: Stakeholders, DE-News, Communities, New books and studies, News Blog Europe (without DE), Quarters, SDG 2030, Settlements, Social / Culture, UN (United Nations), Environmental policy, Housing policy, Ecology, Economics
en_GB