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Characteristics of a Sustainable City
- As seen by FARN, Argentina
 

 

Characteristics to sustainable urban development include to:

  • Improve the quality of life of the population;
  • Improve the living conditions of the poorest social groups;
  • Include natural resources as part of the urban planification and regional territory;
  • Consider urban-environmental plans for short, medium, and long term periods;
  • Incorporate the local sense of place into the environmental education programmes with an interdisciplinary focus;
  • Guarantee public participation throughout all the stages of urban-environmental planning.
  • Integrate Environmental Impact Assessment into urban policy.
  • Create environmental regulations that will respond to local community priorities, but will not infringe upon national and regional laws; and
  • Guarantee an efficient management and implementation of the urban-environmental plans through the coordination of local, provincial, and national governments.

AGENDA XXI; For the Metropolitan Area of Buenos Aires. 1995-1997 .pg.4

Even during a period of rapid demographic growth, physical expansion can be guided through integrated road planning, investment in public transportation, and enforcement of appropriate land use legislation. Technological solutions and standards for everything from public transit to recycling should be chosen on the basis of affordability. Integrated solutions can be implemented through partnerships between key actors. This often requires that the network of formal and informal economic relations be supported and not hindered by urban managers. Creativity can substitute for financial resources. There are ways for traditional sources of problem to be turned into resources. Public information and awareness are essential. The better citizens know their city, the better they treat it (Rabinovitch and Leitman, Environment Innovation and Management in Curitiba, Brazil, UNDP/UNCH/World Bank, Urban Management and the Environment).

In order to create sustainable cities in this rapidly urbanizing world, there is a need to make changes in the organization and the structure of local governments. There is a general acceptance that a centralized and hierarchical bureaucratic system does not function well in today's fast-changing, information-rich, knowledge-based society and economy, and that there is a need for a more effective and efficient government. It has become imperative to make urban organizations and institutions:

  • more flexible and adaptable to changing circumstances;
  • committed to the delivery of high-quality and non-standardized goods and services to meet the demand of an ever more critical population;
  • more efficient to be able "to squeeze ever more bang out of every buck"; and
  • organizations that lead by persuasion and incentives, including empowering citizens.

Source: Re-inventing Local Government for Sustainable Cities, Yap Kioe Sheng and Radhika Savant Mohit. Background paper for International Expert Group Meeting on Capacity Building for Sustainable Cities in Asia, 2-6 June 1997. Human Settlements Development Program, Asian Institute of Technology Bangkok, Thailand. http://www.hsd.ait.ac.th/pra/rilgsc.html.

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