130 likes | 272 Views
A G LOBAL P ARTNERSHIP W ITH C ITIES TO M EET THE C HALLENGE OF P RO -P OOR P OLICIES AND P ROSPEROUS C ITIES W ITHOUT S LUMS. www.cities alliance.org. What is the Cities Alliance?. CITIES ALLIANCE CONSULTATIVE GROUP. Local Authority Organizations.
E N D
A GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP WITH CITIESTO MEETTHE CHALLENGEOF PRO-POOR POLICIESAND PROSPEROUS CITIES WITHOUT SLUMS www.cities alliance.org
What is the Cities Alliance? CITIES ALLIANCE CONSULTATIVE GROUP Local Authority Organizations UTO IULA METROPOLIS WACLAC Bilateral Organizations CANADA FRANCE GERMANY ITALY JAPAN NETHERLANDS NORWAY SWEDEN UNITED KINGDOM UNITED STATES Multilateral Organizations ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK UNEP UN-HABITAT WORLD BANK POLICY ADVISORY BOARD SECRETARIAT “A unique feature of the Alliance is its plurality: international financial institutions, UN agencies, local authority associations, NGOs, and the business community. This will guarantee that a broad spectrum of expertise and resources will be put together to foster urban development and improve the living conditions of millions of people.” -Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Italy.
Learning from Cities Promoting inclusion Reducing poverty Securing tenure Reducing vulnerability Expanding access to credit Clean water and sanitation CITIES PROVIDE LOCAL SOLUTIONS TO GLOBAL PROBLEMS Reversing HIV/AIDS Sustaining the environment Promoting gender equality Expanding employment opportunities Promoting economic opportunities Promoting education opportunities Expanding access to basic infrastructure Reducing infant and maternal mortality
Cities Without Slums Millennium Development Target Target 11 By 2020, to have achieved a significant improvement in the lives of at least100 million slum dwellers Progress will be monitored through... Indicators 30 and 31: (30) Proportion of people with access to improved sanitation (31) Proportion of people with access to secure tenure United Nations General Assembly (A/56/326) 6 September, 2001
Cities Alliance Trust Fund Total Pledges to date: $50 milllion Funds Committed (2000-03): $33 million Linked to $3.8 billion in investments World Bank - $2.3 billion Other sources - $1.5 billion
Countries Making Progress • South Africa – National Urban Renewal Program • Mauritania – Slum upgrading targets in PRSP • Chile – Programa Chile Barrio • Mexico – National Neighborhood Upgrading • Brazil – New Ministry of Cities support to citywide upgrading • Thailand – New nationwide program targeting “200 cities without slums” • Vietnam – New national policy to support upgrading
Obstacles to Citywide Upgrading • Lack of political will • Weak national & local policies • Opaque and distorted land markets • Insecure tenure & forced evictions • Pricing policies & perverse subsidies ... all leading to social exclusion
City Development Strategies (CDS) • A city development strategy (CDS) is an action-plan for equitable growth in cities, developed and sustained through participation, to improve the quality of life for all citizens • The Alliance has supported CDS in 73 cities • CDS outcomes include: • policy and institutional reforms • investment programs • monitoring mechanisms for: • economic growth • poverty reduction • local government performance
Key Elements of a CDS • Assessment - state of the city/region • A good assessment should reflect the unique attributes of • the urban region: • - Its comparative and competitive advantages - The values & preferences of its residents - Its relationship to the global, domestic, and sub-national economies - Its physical characteristics • Examples • Recife • Karu • Aden
Key Elements of a CDS • Vision (10-20 years) • Characteristics of a good vision • Futuristic & visionary, but REALISTIC • Looks long term (10 years or more) but motivates short term action • Easy to understand • Indicates roles for many key stakeholders, not just local governments • Examples • Olongapocity (www.olongapocity.gov.ph) • Ulaan Baatar (www.ulaanbataar.net) • Kingston
Key Elements of a CDS • Strategy – focused on results and accountability • Characteristics of a good strategy • Reflects tough choices: NOTHING IS OF EQUAL IMPORTANCE • Is realistic, but challenging • Limited number of actions with high probability of producing results • Mixes means • Clearly identifies institutional responsibilities & provides incentives for performance • Not solely based on voluntary cooperation • Flexible & revisable: reflecting environmental changes • Examples • Sofia (www.sofia.bg) • Changsha, Zhuzhou & Xiangtan (www.townsfuture.com) • Addis Ababa (www.telecom.net.et/~aamp)
Key Elements of a CDS • Implementation and accountability • Characteristics of a good implementation plan • What, When, How Much, Whose Resources by Year • Expected Impacts & Indicators of Achievement • Monitoring & Assessment System • Identify Negotiation - Conflict Resolution Process among Agencies / Stakeholders • Examples • Johannesburg (www.goafrica.co.za/joburg) • San Fernando (http://www.sflu.com/city/cds/cds1.htm) • Kigali (www.kigalicity.gov.rw)
Further information • For further information see: • The Cities Alliance: www.citiesalliance.org • City Development Strategies Executive Association: www.cdsea.org • City Networking and Investment Marketplace Development Initiative: http://infocity.org • Centro Iberoamericano de Desarrollo Estratégico Urbano (CIDEU): www.cideu.org