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2004 | Buch

From Understanding to Action

Sustainable Urban Development in Medium-Sized Cities in Africa and Latin America

herausgegeben von: Marco Keiner, Christopher Zegras, Willy A. Schmid, Diego Salmerón

Verlag: Springer Netherlands

Buchreihe : Alliance for Global Sustainability Bookseries

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Über dieses Buch

Hans van Ginkel Rector, United Nations University The challenges of the world's future are linked to the growing share of the global population that will reside in urban areas. UN projections indicate that by 2030 the world's urban population share will rise to 60 percent. Of the two billion added to the global population, 99 percent will be added to the urban areas of the world. Of this number, 95 percent will be in countries of the developing world. As most people will live in urban areas we had better work to build and organize them as both attractive and less resource consuming places. That is, to promote sustainable urban development is to promote the creation of dense human settlements that are livable and have reduced their impacts on larger scale ecosystems. While much attention has been focused on the "mega-cities," those with a population of over 10 million, the amount of people living in these places will remain almost constant while the smaller and medium size cities will be the great absorbers of the world's urban population. Indeed, it is predicted that while the absolute number of people that will live in urban centers of 10 million or more will increase from approximately 263 to 375 million between 2000 and 20 IS, their share of the total urban population will only increase from 9. 2 percent to 9. 8 percent, a 6. 34 percent increase.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Urban Development in Southern Africa and Latin America
The scope of the project “Designing, Implementing and Measuring Sustainable Urban Development” (DIMSUD)
Abstract
This initial chapter gives a brief summary of the scope and goals of the DIMSUD project. The starting point is the urbanization process in the developing world. The world’s population is growing tremendously. Particularly affected are developing countries in Africa and Latin America where strong migration fluxes lead to unprecedented urban growth. City sprawl engenders a series of environmental, ecological, and social problems for its inhabitants. Authorities are often unable to steer the development, most of all in so-called “mega cities.” But are there also opportunities to help turn rapid urbanization into sustainable urban development? Cities that are rapidly growing and yet relatively small in comparison to mega cities have to act before their problems become unsolvable. Based on case studies in Johannesburg, Gaborone, and Santiago de Chile, the DIMSUD project analyzed the challenges and potentials for action in order to achieve more sustainable urban development.
Marco Keiner, Diego Salmerón, Willy A. Schmid, Iván Poduje
Chapter 2. Framework for Research on Sustainable Urban Development
The Innovative Collaboration and Research Methodology of the DIMSUD Project
Abstract
This chapter discusses the importance of international academic collaboration on sustainable development and presents the innovative methodological framework for research collaboration within the DIMSUD project. Focus is laid upon four crosscutting research themes that enabled a comparative assessment of the three case study cities: Gaborone, Santiago de Chile, and Johannesburg. Finally, a discussion of research limitations will be followed by an outlook on forthcoming training needs and the dissemination of research results.
Diego Salmerón, Marco Keiner, Willy A. Schmid
Chapter 3. The Case Study Cities
Santiago de Chile, Johannesburg, Gaborone
Abstract
This chapter examines the “sense of place” of Santiago de Chile, Johannesburg and Gaborone, reflecting on their environmental, physical, socioeconomic, policy and development perspectives. In each individual case study city, short textual episodes and topical themes are used to focus on the distinctive urban settings and sustainability experiences of previous and newly born generations of Latin American and African urban dwellers. For this chapter, the background information is resourced from individual DIMSUD project city reports covering a wide range of urban narrations and descriptions aiming at supporting more sustainable urban practices. After two years of investigation by DIMSUD partners, this chapter draws on synthetic rendering to try to come closer to understanding the individual qualities and dynamics of these three rapidly expanding cities.
Branko I. Cavric, Aloyse C. Mosha, Marco Keiner
Chapter 4. Challenges for Sustainable Urban Development
Abstract
This chapter focuses on the key challenges facing cities in developing countries. Observations from the case study cities of Gaborone, Santiago and Johannesburg have indicated an overwhelming range and scale of challenges with extremely limited opportunities. Deterioration of socioeconomic, environmental and institutional capacity has been noted as a recurrent trend in all three cities. Equally, prioritization of socioeconomic and local environmental challenges has meant that global environmental concerns have not been accepted as urgent local issues. Consequently, the expectation that, through sustainable development, developing countries will catapult themselves into cleaner technologies (smaller ecological footprint with increasing standards of living) cannot be justified on the basis of the prevailing trends in the case study cities at this point. It is therefore clear that efforts to address sustainable urban development in a comprehensive manner will require many more resources and several times the capacity currently in place within such cities.
Daniel K. Irurah, Björn Malbert, Pål Castell, Jaan-Henrik Kain, Branko I. Cavric, Aloyse C. Mosha
Chapter 5. Opportunities and Strategies for Sustainable Urban Development
Abstract
Even though the global sustainable development paradigm has started to be translated into local visions for action in various developing countries and their respective cities, the process is extremely slow and fragmented. In particular, the absence of a comprehensive sustainability-based framework for national, regional and local planning indicates a lack of commitment to or incapacity for practical implementation beyond the political stage of signing global framework initiatives such as Agenda 21 and Habitat Agenda. All three case study cities exhibit several pieces of policies, legislation and strategies and plans at national and local levels from which a comprehensive approach to sustainable urban development can evolve. Therefore, political will and institutional capacity at national and local levels are likely to remain the key determinant factors towards realizing integrated strategies in the case study cities as well as most other cities in developing countries.
Daniel K. Irurah, Björn Malbert, Aly Karam, Pål Castell, Marco Keiner, Branko I. Cavric
Chapter 6. Indicators for Sustainable Urban Development
Abstract
This chapter explores the critical issue of measuring sustainable urban development (SUD) via the use of indicators. The chapter begins by situating indicators within the broader urban planning process, showing how they help measure goals and objectives, define evaluation criteria and monitor progress. Recognizing the inherent complexity of the sustainability concept, the chapter then presents the hierarchy of information generally used, in the measurement process. Several different approaches and techniques for measuring sustainability — via indicators and indices — are presented, and building on these precedents, the sustainable indicator prism is proposed as a means for structurally guiding and understanding the informational and geographical scales implicit in the multidimensionality of sustainable urban development (SUD). The chapter recognizes that a “one-size-fits-all” approach to SUD indicators is not possible; key challenges include the lack of responsible authority and the lack of place-specific data. Ultimately, indicators must reflect political reality, information availability and a relevant scale of analysis.
P. Christopher Zegras, Iván Poduje, Whitney Foutz, Eran Ben-Joseph, Oscar Figueroa
Chapter 7. Toward Sustainable Urban Management in Developing Countries
A Synthesis of the DIMSUD Project Findings and Further General Recommendations
Abstract
This chapter concludes the findings of the completed research and positions the three case study cities with regard to their sustainability goals. One overall finding is that sustainability has to be defined for each specific context and that good urban management is the key to achieving it. In addition, recommendations for responsible urban management, such as establishing strategies for sustainable urban development, promoting decentralization, improving cooperation, harmonizing strategies with legal regulations and planning instruments, enhancing public participation and monitoring and controlling urban development, have been distilled. These recommendations, although based on the analyses of the case study cities, are also relevant for any other comparable city striving for sustainability. Finally, emphasizing the need to train national and local authority staff in the latest implementation methods developed from continuing research closes the gap between academia and practice.
Marco Keiner, Diego Salmerón, Willy A. Schmid, Iván Poduje
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
From Understanding to Action
herausgegeben von
Marco Keiner
Christopher Zegras
Willy A. Schmid
Diego Salmerón
Copyright-Jahr
2004
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Electronic ISBN
978-1-4020-2921-9
Print ISBN
978-90-481-6737-1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-2921-9