Thursday, 20 October 2016

New Book | Guidelines on Urban and Peri-Urban Forestry

Guidelines on Urban and Peri-Urban Forestry
by F. Salbitano, S. Borelli, M. Conigliaro and Y. Chen. FAO Forestry Paper No. 178. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome, 2016. ISBN 9789251094426.


Foreword
Although cities occupy only 2 percent of the planet's surface, their inhabitants use 75 percent of its natural resources. The world is urbanizing quickly, too: by 2050, 70 percent of the global population will live in cities and towns. Sustainable urban development is crucial, therefore, for ensuring the quality of life of the world's people.
Forests and trees in urban and peri-urban environments, if properly managed, can make important contributions to the planning, design and management of sustainable, resilient landscapes. They can help make cities:
  • safer – by reducing stormwater runoff and the impacts of wind and sand storms, mitigating the "heat island" effect, and contributing to the adaptation and mitigation of climate change;
  • more pleasant – by providing space for recreation and venues for social and religious events, and ameliorating weather extremes;
  • healthier – by improving air quality, providing space for physical exercise, and fostering psychological well-being;
  • wealthier – by providing opportunities for the production of food, medicines and wood and generating economically valuable ecosystem services; and
  • more diverse and attractive – by providing natural experiences for urban and peri-urban dwellers, increasing biodiversity, creating diverse landscapes, and maintaining cultural traditions.
To support the world's cities in reaping the benefits of urban and peri-urban forests, a few years ago FAO initiated a collaborative process to develop voluntary guidelines aimed at optimizing the contributions of forests and trees to sustainable urban development. Scientists, practitioners and public administrators from cities worldwide were brought together in a series of workshops to discuss the elements and key challenges of urban forestry, and a smaller team of experts was assembled to distil this vast knowledge.
This document is the ultimate result of that process. It is intended for a global audience, primarily comprising urban decision-makers, civil servants, policy advisors and other stakeholders to assist in developing urban and peri-urban forests as a way of meeting the present and future needs of cities for forest products and ecosystem services. The guidelines will also help increase community awareness of the contributions that trees and forests can make to improving quality of life, and of their essential role in global sustainability.
I thank all those involved in producing this document, which, I have no doubt, will help ensure that cities worldwide maintain and enhance the well-being of their citizens and the global environment.
René Castro-Salazar | Assistant Director-General, FAO Forestry Department


Tuesday, 18 October 2016

New Book | UNESCO Global Report on Culture for Sustainable Urban Development

UNESCO Global Report on Culture for Sustainable Urban Development
by UNESCO Publishing, Paris, 2016. ISBN 9789231001703.


Foreword
With over half of the world's population now living in urban areas, the road to sustainable development passes through cities in every corner of the globe. As the United Nations works to implement the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the New Urban Agenda, to be adopted at the Third United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development (Habitat III) in October 2016, it is critical to bring together the best policies to make the most of our cities.
The challenges we face are steep and cities are on the frontlines of sustainable development issues such as education, food security, water management, the development of inclusive societies, and effective institutions. Yet cities are also one of humanity's most brilliant inventions for crafting solutions for the future. Fundamentally, cities bring creative and productive people together, helping them to do what they do best: exchange, create and innovate. From the ancient cities of Mesopotamia to the city-states of the Italian Renaissance and the vibrant metropolises of today, urban areas have been among the most powerful engines of human development. Today, we must once again place our hope in cities.
Culture lies at the heart of urban renewal and innovation. This Report provides a wealth of insights and concrete evidence showing the power of culture as a strategic asset for creating cities that are more inclusive, creative and sustainable. Creativity and cultural diversity have been the key drivers of urban success. Cultural activities can foster social inclusion and dialogue among diverse communities. Tangible and intangible heritage are integral parts of a city's identity, creating a sense of belonging and cohesion. Culture embodies the soul of a city, allowing it to progress and build a future of dignity for all. This reflection has been at the core of UNESCO's work over the last decades, notably through the development of programmes such as the Creative Cities Network, the Learning and Smart Cities initiatives and the protection of historic urban landscapes. This vision has received new energy with the explicit recognition of the role of culture as an enabler of sustainable development, and as one of the key conditions to achieve Sustainable Development Goal 11 to 'Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable'.
A human-centred city is a culture-centred space. We must translate this reality into more effective policies and sustainable urban governance. Cities have become living laboratories for determining how some of the most pressing challenges we face are negotiated, managed and experienced. We must strengthen the cultural assets of cities, the heritage that provides a sense of meaning and identity to their inhabitants, and the creative opportunities that enhance the vitality, liveability and prosperity of our cities.
This Report would not be possible without the contributions of a number of key partners of UNESCO. In this regard, I particularly wish to thank the Government of the Kingdom of Spain and the Hangzhou Municipal People's Government, whose support for UNESCO's work in the field of culture and sustainable urban development has been instrumental in bringing this publication to fruition.
Irina Bokova | Director-General of UNESCO

Table of Contents
Part I | Global survey on the role of culture for sustainable urban development
Part II | Culture for sustainable cities: a thematic approach
Section A People Building on the power of culture to promote human and inclusive cities
Section B Environment Improving the quality of the built and natural environment through culture
Section C Policies Integrating culture in urban policies to foster sustainable urban development
Conclusions and Recommendations | Culture for transformative change in cities



New Book | Housing and Land Rights in India: Status Report for Habitat III

Housing and Land Rights in India: Status Report for Habitat III
by Housing and Land Rights Network (HLRN), New Delhi, 2016. ISBN: 9788190256988. 

Table of Contents
I.  | Introduction
II. | Urban Housing and Living Conditions
III.| Rural Housing, Land, and Living Conditions
IV. | Impacts of Disasters on Housing and Land
V.  | Conflict-Induced Displacement
VI. | Discrimination in Access to Housing and Land
VII.| Persecution of Housing and Land Rights Defenders
VIII.| Law and Policy Framework Related to Housing and Land
IX. | Recommendations to the Government of India
X.  | Recommendations to UN-Habitat for Habitat III
XI. | Conclusion

About the Report
Housing and Land Rights Network (HLRN) works for the recognition, defence, promotion, and realization of the human rights to adequate housing and land, which involves securing a safe and secure place for all individuals and communities, especially marginalized communities, to live in peace and dignity. A particular focus of HLRN's work is on promoting and protecting the equal rights of women to adequate housing, land, property, and inheritance. HLRN aims to achieve its goals through advocacy, research, human rights education, and outreach and network-building – at local, national, and international levels. This report, prepared by HLRN and endorsed by several social movements and civil society organizations across India, aims to serve as a parallel report to the Government of India's official submission to UN-Habitat for the United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development (Habitat III), which will be held in October 2016 in Quito, Ecuador. The report analyzes India's implementation of the Habitat Agenda (1996) and documents the current status of housing and land rights in the country while highlighting related law and policy developments. It presents recommendations to the Government of India for the improvement of housing and living conditions in the country, and to UN-Habitat for the development of a human rights-based 'new agenda' at Habitat III. HLRN strongly believes that nation states and UN-Habitat must not ignore the rural dimension of habitat and must ensure that the 'new agenda' focuses on adopting a comprehensive human rights approach that incorporates the principles of indivisibility of human rights, gender equality, non-discrimination, progressive realization, non-retrogression, environmental sustainability, participation, accountability, and international cooperation. HLRN hopes that this report will help draw attention to critical issues related to the realization of housing and land rights in India, and will help promote the adoption of a human rights agenda at Habitat III that integrates the commitments of the Habitat Agenda and international law and standards.


New Book | India Habitat III National Report 2016

India Habitat III National Report 2016
by Ministry of Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation, New Delhi, India, 2016. 

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 | Urbanization and Urban-Growth-Poverty Linkages
Chapter 2 | Urban Land, Planning and Mobility
Chapter 3 | Environment and Urbanization 
Chapter 4 | Housing and Basic Services
Chapter 5 | Managing Urbanization: Structure of Urban Governance
Chapter 6 | Municipal Finance and Financial Innovations
Chapter 7 | Urban Initiatives and the New Urban Agenda

Preamble
The India National Report is a sequel to resolution 24/14 of the UN Habitat Governing Council, adopted in its twenty-fourth session by which the Council invited its member states to prepare national reports on the "implementation of the Habitat-II agenda and of the other relevant internationally agreed goals and targets as well as new challenges, emerging trends, and a prospective vision for sustainable human settlements and urban development". Since the adoption of Habitat II agenda in 1996, India's urban sector has witnessed important changes, and, in many ways, has posted departures from the earlier ways of looking at urbanization in the country's growth and development processes. First, between 1996 and 2015, India has added approximately 171 million people to its urban population base. Its urban footprints have expanded to 7,933 settlements, several of which are "census towns," i.e., settlements that have the required urban characteristics but have structures of rural governance. Economic composition as represented by the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has decisively changed in favour of non-primary-sector activities, especially the services sector which currently contributes over 55 per cent to the GDP. Second, between 2004–05 and 2011–12 India has lifted over 15 million persons out of poverty in the urban areas; likewise, the proportion of slum population has dipped to 17.4 per cent within a decade. Infrastructure and services now reach out to 75 per cent in case of water and 81 per cent in case of latrines. However, at the same time, challenges in the form of service deficits persist. Also, the structures of governance and financial systems have not kept pace with the changes in the demographic and economic compositions and the levels of urbanization.
India explicitly recognizes the role and importance of urbanization and cities in the process of its socio-economic transformation, and affirms its commitment to the larger goals of urban equity and eradication of poverty; inclusive urban prosperity and opportunities for all; productivity, competitiveness, diversification and innovation; and urban resilience. Its current approach to urbanization is focussed on several objectives: (i) urbanization must generate growth and enhance economic productivity and competitiveness; (ii) it should be inclusive and sustainable; (iii) it should aim at preservation and revitalization of history, culture and heritage; and (iv) it should contribute to the development of rural areas and strengthen ruralurban interdependencies. Consistent with these goals and objectives, the Government of India has launched a number of missions, the key ones being the Smart Cities Mission, Atal Mission for Rejuvenation of Urban Transformation (AMRUT), Swachh Bharat (Clean India) Mission, Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana- Housing For All (HFA), Heritage City Development and Augmentation Yojana (HRIDAY), and Rurban Mission. This report lays out a brief account of the state of the urban sector and the challenges and complexities it faces, and outlines the initiatives and strategies that have been taken to address these.
The India National Report consists of seven chapters. Chapter 1 provides an assessment of the urbanization trends in the country, focussing on how the trends are being shaped, on the one hand, by domestic priorities such as the accelerated development of rural areas and the need to forge stronger urban-rural linkages, and on the other hand, by factors driven by competition between cities for improved productivity and economic vibrancy. Chapters 2-4 outline the developments and challenges in the spheres of urban land and housing market, urban environment, infrastructure and services. The governance and financing systems of cities (urban local bodies) are discussed in chapters 5 and 6, referring especially to putting in place a strong system of inter-governmental system of transfers, increased local government autonomy, a focussed use of the nascent but growing capital market for financing priority infrastructure services and the development of public-private partnership facility. Chapter 7 gives an account of the urban initiatives and a perspective vision for the new urban agenda, affirming its commitment to the new international benchmarks as embodied in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the Paris Agreement on climate change.


Top Twenty Five Tweets on HabitatIII | The United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development. 17 - 20 October 2016, Quito, Ecuador

Top Twenty Five Tweets on HabitatIII | The United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development. 17 - 20 October 2016, Quito, Ecuador

  • 3.7 billion people live in cities. As the urban population continues to grow, health inequities persist #Habitat3. http://bit.ly/habitatthree | ‏@WHO/ @UN
  • 54% of global population now lives in cities ↪No sustainable mobility without sustainable urban transport: http://wrld.bg/Jmms305espT #Habitat3 | ‏@WorldBank
  • 70-90% of our global food is farmed & processed by women. No women= no food= no life: http://bit.ly/2d8y0Jd #Habitat3 | @UNDP
  • 9 in 10 people breathe air that's not safe. Air Pollution, an invisible killer that we may face on a simple walk home. #BreatheLife #Habitat3 | ‏@WHO
  • Air Pollution: 92% of the world's population live in places where air quality levels exceed WHO limits http://goo.gl/Nq9AF7 #Habitat3 | @WHO
  • All eyes on #Habitat3 as we move toward #NewUrbanAgenda - new global standard for sustainable urban development: http://bit.ly/2a2uWsP | @UNPublications
  • As cities grow faster than ever, it's key they grow safely. Listen to @UNDP Goodwill Ambassador Michelle Yeoh discuss road safety. #Habitat3 | @GlobalGoalsUN
  • By 2050, 6.3 billion will live in cities & will need access to healthy, environmentally friendly food: http://bit.ly/2djKuPf #Habitat3 | ‏@UNEP
  • By utilizing full potential of ICT, Sustainable #SmartCities are enablers for achieving main objectives in #NewUrbanAgenda ~@ITU #Habitat3 | @ITU
  • Cities are remarkable engines of growth. Let us use their potential to transform our world for the better. --Ban Ki-moon #Habitat3 | @GlobalGoalsUN
  • Displaced fleeing besieged areas often escape to cities in #Syria. @UndpSyria provides them with jobs to rebuild health centers. #Habitat3 | @UNDP
  • Education must be integrated into urban planning to create sustainable cities #NewUrbanAgenda #Habitat3 http://Bit.ly/GEMPLACES | @GEMReport
  • Geodata can help manage social, economic, & environment|al challenges of urbanization. See how: http://wrld.bg/JsZ0305esQF #Habitat3 #China | @WorldBank
  • Geodata helped Johannesburg improve urban planning & public services. What can other cities learn? http://wrld.bg/g5Mn305esUP #Habitat3 #SouthAfrica | ‏@WorldBank
  • #Habitat3: #UN conference to agree new model of urban development that creates sustainable, equitable cities for all http://bit.ly/2dhRtTX | @UN_News_Centre
  • #Habitat3: There's an urgency to address health disparities & their determinants in cities #UrbanHealth http://goo.gl/iUxlbX | @WHO
  • Health inequalities undermine progress: Over 880 million people live in slums http://goo.gl/iUxlbX #Habitat3 #UrbanHealth | @WHO
  • Housing shouldn't be like buying a car but instead it should be considered an investment instead of a social expense #H3UrbanTalk #Habitat3 | ‏@Habitat3UN
  • Planning cities is a critical challenge in 21st century amid mass #urbanisation, @UN says http://tmsnrt.rs/2epUbZz #Habitat3 @Habitat3UN | @AlertnetClimate
  • Take strong ownership of vital new agenda, create cities of the future, #UNSG Ban urges world's mayors at #Habitat3. http://bit.ly/2elPqjv | ‏@UN_News_Centre
  • UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon calls on city mayors to "take ownership" of the #GlobalGoals. #Habitat3 | @UN
  • UN Women strongly advocates for putting Gender Equality at the heart of the New Urban Agenda at @Habitat3UN. For more follow #Habitat3 | @UNWomenIndia
  • "We recognize women as invaluable agents of change in creating cities free of violence against women and girls" #NewUrbanAgenda #Habitat3 | ‏@Habitat3UN
  • 'When shopping malls replace public space, it's a symptom that the city is ill' https://gu.com/p/57b43/stw @guardiancities #Habitat3 | @Guardian
  • "You can't think of a city without thinking about culture because what is the DNA of a place? #Culture4Cities #Habitat3 https://youtu.be/lNZjXcI-YIA | @UNESCO

Monday, 17 October 2016

New Book | The BRICS in International Development

The BRICS in International Development
Edited by Jing Gu, Alex Shankland, and Anuradha Chenoy. International Political Economy Series. Palgrave Macmillan & IDS Rising Powers, 2016, ISBN 9781137556462, Hardcover, $139.00.

About this Book
This book offers a comprehensive comparative perspective on the increasingly significant development cooperation activities of the BRICS. Providing a powerful set of insights into the drivers for engagement within each country, it brings together leading experts from Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa and OECD countries. The authors review the empirical evidence for the BRICS' modes of development cooperation and their geographical reach, and explore the historical background and patterns of international development engagement of each country. They also present a cutting-edge analysis of the broader geopolitical shifts, distinctive ideologies and normative discourses that are influencing and informing their engagement in increasingly ambitious joint projects such as the New Development Bank. This collection is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the rapidly changing landscape of international development.

Table of Contents
Introduction: International Development, South-South Cooperation and the Rising Powers | Jing Gu (et al.)
Brazil as a Development Partner Under Lula and Rousseff: Shifts and Continuities | Bianca Suyama (et al.)
Russia: A Re-emerging Donor | Marina Larionova (et al.)
India: From Technical Cooperation to Trade and Investment | Anuradha Chenoy (et al.)
China on the Move: The 'New Silk Road' to International Development Cooperation? | Jing Gu (et al.)
South Africa: Security and Stability in Development Cooperation | Neuma Grobbelaar
Civil Society, BRICS and International Development Cooperation: Perspectives from India, South Africa and Brazil | Melissa Pomeroy (et al.)
Looking Across BRICS: An Emerging International Development Agenda? | Anuradha Chenoy (et al.)


Friday, 7 October 2016

New Book | Development Finance in BRICS Countries

Development Finance in BRICS Countries
by Axel Harneit-Sievers, C.P. Chandrasekhar, Mark Grimsditch, Yu Yin, Mzukisi Qobo, Carlos Tautz, João Roberto Lopes Pinto, and Fabricia de Andrade Ramos. Heinrich Böll Foundation, New Delhi, 2015.

Table of Contents
Preface: Development Banking in the BRICS Countries | Axel Harneit-Sievers
Introduction: Development Banking in Comparative Perspective | C.P.Chandrasekhar
Brazil's National Bank for Social and Economic Development BNDES: A Critical Analysis | Carlos Tautz, João Roberto Lopes Pinto and Fabricia de Andrade Ramos
Development Finance in India | C. P. Chandrasekhar
Development Finance: A Review from China | Mark Grimsditch and Yu Yin
Development Banks & Civil Society in South Africa | Mzukisi Qobo

 
Summary:
For decades, the world of development banking was dominated by a few multilateral actors, foremost the World Bank Group as well as regional development banks. In recent years, some established banks have much expanded their scope of operation, while new actors and interests are moving in. A number of national development banks, for example from China and Brazil, have entered the international arena in a big way, often operating far outside of their respective home countries and becoming truly global actors.
The BRICS group of five major emerging economies (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), during the BRICS Summit in Fortaleza, Brazil, in July 2014, formally announced the creation of the group's own New Development Bank (NDB). China, in October 2014, launched the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), and in May 2015, Japan announced a massive 100 billion USD financial package for an Asia infrastructure programme within the framework of the Asian Development Bank.
The new rush into development banking is going to have substantial large-scale political, socio-economic and environmental implications. At the same time, development banking, it appears, is becoming more diverse and competitive than ever. Or is it?
The very concept of "development" means different things to different people. In fact, there have been branches of development banking directed, for example, at the support of small scale farming or medium-scale businesses. But overall, it is the creation of infrastructure – and of large-scale infrastructure – which has been at the heart of development banking in the post-World War II era. The very rationale of development banking is to mobilise long-term, large scale financing for projects where other – usually private – sources of finance either do not exist or are unable or unwilling to participate due to the risks of long-term engagement.
The new and expanding institutions of development finance reflect the considerable growth of political and economic self-confidence in the emerging economies. It remains to be seen how far they will really challenge established patterns of global development banking.
In the midst of major expectations of the positive political impact of the new development finance institutions for the developing world, considerations of the kind and quality of the very "development" that these banks may contribute to have largely taken a back seat. Investment in large-scale infrastructure is necessary for economic growth; but at the same time it typically entails considerable social and ecological costs. Frequently there are manifest and severe implications, especially the displacement of local populations and the destruction of natural habitats and biodiversity.
For decades, protests and social movements in affected regions and countries have pointed to these issues, and some of them have managed to stop or modify projects. For example, since the 1990s, the number of big dam projects commissioned declined in many parts of the world, at least outside China. Local resistance and international criticism appear to have made it more difficult to construct big dams in the same manner as in decades past.
After numerous struggles, social and environmental safeguards and procedures apply to financing of infrastructure by the World Bank. Despite criticism, especially from civil society actors, about their implementation, the World Bank standards create the reference baseline against which to evaluate and debate infrastructure projects; they constitute the precondition for a degree of transparency which allows public scrutiny of the work of the world's major development finance institutions.
With growing competition within the world of development financing, existing standards and safeguards could be at risk. Competition between financing institutions could contribute to weakening them; various national development banks are far less susceptible to international pressure than the World Bank.
In this regard, critics view the ongoing revision of the World Bank safeguards with scepticism. From the perspective of social and ecological protection, it would be a tragedy if an increased diversity of actors and the stronger role of the Global South in the field of development finance, as desirable as it appears from the political perspective, resulted in a weakening and crowding out of safeguards and standards applied in decisions about infrastructure financing.
Many champions of social and environmental protection for vulnerable groups and endangered habitats feel ambivalent about the recent expansion of development banking, particularly for large-scale infrastructure development. Some question the entire development model behind large-scale infrastructure directed towards economic growth. Others focus on engagement with governments and especially the existing and newly emerging development finance institutions in order to achieve better outcomes. Non-specialist actors in the development field may wish to improve their understanding of new trends and challenges in the field of development finance and expand their engagement on this issue. As the NDB is being created by the BRICS countries, it is worthwhile to take a closer look at the practice of and experiences with development banking in each of these countries in order to understand where they are coming from and what perspective they are taking in its creation.
This volume aims to provide background information for an informed debate about development financing from the perspective of emerging economies, especially the BRICS countries. It includes five essays that address the experiences with (mostly national) development banks, showing a high degree of diversity in national policies.
In the first essay, C.P. Chandrasekhar provides an overview of the rationale and major trends in global development banking, comparing experiences and trends from emerging economies within BRICS and beyond them. The four contributions that follow look at the national experiences in each of these countries. For Brazil, Carlos Tautz, João Roberto Lopes Pinto and Fabricia de Andrade Ramos study the rise of the Brazilian Economic and Social Development Bank (BNDES) from a national to a global player, whose structures and policies many observers believe will influence the NDB created by the BRICS countries. Mark Grimsditch and Yu Yin look at the large "policy banks" created by China's government In order to promote national infrastructure expansion and China's international engagement; in terms of sheer scale, these banks have changed the world of development finance over the last two decades. C.P. Chandrasekhar looks at the decidedly different experience of India, where large-scale development banking has lost relevance; instead, public-private partnerships have been used on a large scale for infrastructure financing, with quite mixed results. Finally, Mzukisi Qobo studies the two main development banks of South Africa, with a particular focus on identifying ways to increase civil society engagement with these banks and their policies.