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Overcoming barriers to affordable housing finance
How can we enhance access to affordable housing and scale up housing finance?
Housing is recognized as a fundamental right under Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Despite this, around 2.8 billion people live in inadequate housing conditions, lacking basic services and struggling to afford costs. The situation is projected to worsen, with an estimated 2.5 billion more people expected in African and Asian cities by 2050. Improving access to adequate and affordable housing is crucial for sustainable development. However, formal housing systems often fail low-income communities, with limited policy success and scarce access to housing finance. As a result, many must rely on informal methods, using their own savings and labor for housing solutions.
In this fifth and final episode of the Urban Innovation to Achieve Just & Sustainable Cities peer-learning series, we will focus on effective mechanisms to improve access to finance for those who do not qualify for commercial loans. This discussion aims to highlight successful practices in providing adequate, safe, and affordable housing and accessing finance in the Global South. Additionally, it will examine barriers and opportunities related to housing-related finance for low-income households and explore potential interventions along the housing supply chain to enhance access to affordable housing on a larger scale.
This session is co-organized by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) and the Centre for Affordable Housing Finance in Africa, in partnership with Cities Alliance, UN-Habitat, ICLEI, Slum Dwellers International, the African Union for Housing Finance, and the City Diplomacy Lab.
Program
Keynote: Illana Melzer, Engagement Manager, 71point4
Moderation: Lorenzo Kihlgren Grandi, Founding Director, City Diplomacy Lab
Speakers:
- Kecia Rust, Executive Director, Centre for Affordable Housing Finance in Africa (CAHF)
- Joy Wachira, Programme Lead Green Affordable Housing, REALL
- Girlie Lopez, Philippines Country Programme Manager, Build Change
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Designing Inclusive Cities: Gender and Sustainability in Urban Development
How can urban communities achieve gender-inclusive sustainable development?
In their journey towards sustainability, many urban communities worldwide encounter significant challenges due to gender segregation in public spaces. With the latter generally designed around the specific needs of men, physical limitations hinder the unfolding of an accessible, safe, and active gender-inclusive public life.
In this fourth episode of the Urban Innovation to Achieve Just & Sustainable Cities peer-learning series, we will explore how to transform our cities through gender-inclusive urban planning and construction processes. The panelists will reflect on some of the most impactful regulatory instruments and participative approaches from city developments in the Global South.
This session is co-organized by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) and Cities Alliance, in partnership with UN-Habitat, ICLEI, Slum Dwellers International, the Centre for Affordable Housing Finance, the African Union for Housing Finance, and the City Diplomacy Lab.
Program
Keynote: Aziza Chaouni, Architect, Associate Professor of Architecture, University of Toronto. Founder of Aziza Chaouni Projects (ACP)
Moderation: Lorenzo Kihlgren Grandi, Founding Director, City Diplomacy Lab
Speakers:
- Sri Husnaini Sofjan, Senior Program Advisor and Strategist, Huairou Commission
- Bijal Brahmbhatt, Director, Mahila Housing Trust
- Ikbel Dridri, Senior Project Manager, Cities Alliance Tunisia
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Strengthening urban resilience at the World Urban Forum
Innovating Urban Resilience
Financing Strategies and Smart Solutions for Cities Worldwide
📍12th World Urban Forum, Cairo, Egypt – Multipurpose room 03
🗓 November 5, 2024, at 5:00 pm local time (UTC+2)
Urban resilience requires innovative strategies that blend institutional creativity, local engagement, and global expertise. At the 12th World Urban Forum in Cairo, the City Diplomacy Lab, the five United Nations Regional Commissions (UNECE, UNECLAC, UNECA, UNESCWA, and UNESCAP), and UN-Habitat gathered experts and city leaders to explore some of the most innovative approaches to overcoming urban challenges such as climate change, socio-economic crises, and rapid urbanization.
This hybrid networking event was organized within the framework of the United Nations Global Development Account (UNDA) project entitled Supporting Member States in Urban Economic Resilience, whose goal is to strengthen the capacity of cities to mitigate, recover, adapt, and transform toward sustainability in the face of a wide array of shocks and stresses.
Watch the Recording
Summary
Dr. Lorenzo Kihlgren Grandi, founding director of the City Diplomacy Lab, set the stage by emphasizing resilience as a collaborative ecosystem. He framed cities as living organisms thriving through the dynamic interplay of actors and partnerships, which are essential for crafting adaptive solutions to modern crises.
Representing the United Nations, Ms. Fiona Littlejohn-Carrillo, Economic Affairs Officer at the UNECLAC, introduced the United Nations Global Development Account (UNDA) project entitled Supporting Member States in Urban Economic Resilience. This inter-agency pilot project is designed to equip cities worldwide with tools to fund and implement urban economic resilience strategies. Her contribution underscored the necessity of tailoring these efforts to specific local contexts, ensuring no city is left behind.
From the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Mr. Emre Oguzoncul showcased the Green Cities program as a flagship initiative. His key insight was the importance of innovative financial instruments, such as green bonds, which empower cities to prioritize and fund their unique climate action plans.
Mr. Ko Takeuchi of the World Bank underscored the importance of proactive urban planning. He emphasized leveraging robust data and global trust funds to design scalable projects that incorporate both short-term adaptation needs and long-term climate mitigation goals.
Drawing from her expertise in urban economics, Prof. Cynthia Goytia of the Torcuato di Tella University in Buenos Aires advocated for integrating risk management into urban planning. She presented compelling examples of how cities can recoup the costs of resilience projects by capturing the value these investments generate, such as through land-based financing.
Dr. Viswanathan Srinivasan, from Tamil Nadu’s Green Climate Company, highlighted an ambitious initiative to implement energy-efficient projects, urban forestry, and lake restoration. He stressed the importance of forging partnerships with international organizations to strengthen local capacity and attract funding.
Advocating for smart technologies, Dr. Maysoun Ibrahim described how tools like AI and digital systems have revolutionized urban resilience, particularly during crises like COVID-19. Her message centered on the transformative potential of technology, paired with citizen engagement, to adapt urban systems rapidly.
From Amman, Eng. Ahmad Malkawi discussed the city’s innovative flood mitigation project and its updated zoning laws. His contribution emphasized Amman’s efforts to incorporate community voices into neighborhood-level urban planning, fostering a shared sense of responsibility.
Hon. Jacob Mafume, the Mayor of Harare, highlighted financial resilience as a cornerstone of urban stability. His plans to create a city stabilization fund and improve revenue collection reflected the necessity of sustainable financing mechanisms in resource-constrained environments.
From Santa Fe, Ms. Lucila García detailed an inspiring urban reserve project that transformed flood-prone wetlands into a resilient public space. Her example demonstrated how cities can blend environmental restoration with social benefits, such as housing relocations for vulnerable populations.
Finally, Ms. Sonja Dragović, a researcher at KANA/ko ako ne arhitekt in Podgorica, emphasized the power of grassroots urban resilience. She advocated for policymakers to recognize and integrate community-driven initiatives, such as sustainable mobility projects, which often provide the groundwork for long-term urban sustainability.
Ms. Anna Katrina Karaan, representing UN-Habitat’s City Resilience Global Program, closed the event by emphasizing the need to turn plans into actionable realities. She highlighted the program’s ongoing efforts to support cities in developing financing strategies and announced a free, self-paced e-learning course aimed at sharing knowledge on urban economic resilience. This course integrates lessons learned from collaborative projects and the event itself, encouraging participants to join the global journey toward building resilient, sustainable urban futures.
Program
Opening remarks
- Dr. Lorenzo Kihlgren Grandi, Founding Director, City Diplomacy Lab
- Ms. Fiona Littlejohn, Economic Affairs Officer, Human Settlements Unit, UNECLAC
Panel of Experts
- Mr. Emre Oguzoncul, Principal, Climate Strategy & Delivery, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)
- Mr. Ko Takeuchi, Senior Specialist on Urban Development and Disaster Risk Management, World Bank
- Prof. Cynthia Goytia, Professor of Urban Economics, University Torcuato di Tella, Argentina
- Dr. Viswanathan Srinivasan, Chief Executive Officer, Tamil Nadu Green Climate Company, Department of Environment, Climate Change and Forest, Government of Tamil Nadu
- Dr. Maysoun Ibrahim, Founding President, Palestinian Syndicate for Information Sciences and Technology (Online)
UNDA16 Cities Testimonies
- Eng. Ahmad Malkawi, City Manager, Amman, Jordan
- Hon. Jacob Mafume, Mayor of Harare, Zimbabwe
- Ms. Lucila García, Director, Agency for Cooperation, Investment and Foreign Trade (ACICE), City of Santa Fe, Argentina (Online)
- Ms. Sonja Dragović, Researcher in urbanism and public policy, KANA/ko ako ne arhitekt, Podgorica, Montenegro
Closing Remarks
- Ms. Anna Katrina Karaan, Urban Resilience Specialist, City Resilience Global Programme (CRGP), UN-Habitat
Amman, Cairo, CEPAL, Coimbatore, EBRD, ECLAC, ESCAP, ESCWA, finance, Harare, Podgorica, resilience, Santa Fe, SDG 11, smart city, subnational finance, sustainable urban development, UN-Habitat, UNDA, UNECA, UNECE, UNECLAC, UNESCAP, UNESCWA, United Nations, urban economic resilience, World Bank, World Urban Forum, WUF12 -
Cities for all. Bottom-up action for just urban development
How to imagine, build, and transform cities in a participatory way?
The participatory approach to urban development is widely regarded as an asset for cities. It enables the evolution of urban space to be aligned with the needs and aspirations of all its residents and actors while also leveraging and enhancing their creativity, knowledge, and energies for the common good.
However, such a participatory approach often runs up against the underrepresentation of large segments of the urban population, as is particularly evident in the Global South’s less affluent and informal neighborhoods. Unsurprisingly, such neighborhoods are also those characterized by reduced access to essential services and opportunities for economic and social development.
Fortunately, many examples in the Global South illustrate the positive impact of dialogue and collaboration between municipal governments, civil society, and citizen movements. In this third episode of the Urban Innovation to Achieve Just & Sustainable Cities series, we will delve into the nature and impact of these good practices and discuss their replicability across the world.
This session is part of the Daring Cities Virtual Forum 2024 and is co-organized by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) and ICLEI in partnership with Cities Alliance, UN-Habitat, Slum Dwellers International, the Centre for Affordable Housing Finance, the African Union for Housing Finance, and the City Diplomacy Lab.
Program
Keynote by Suhailey Farzana, community architect and co-founder of Co.Creation.Architects and Platform of Community Action and Architecture (POCAA)
Panel discussion
- Joseph Kimani, Slum Dwellers International Kenya Director
- Paula Sevilla Nunez, IIED Researcher
- Naomi L. Y. Flomo and George Y. Gleh, Federation of Liberia Urban Poor Savers (FOLUPS)
Lorenzo Kihlgren Grandi, City Diplomacy Lab Founding Director (Chair).
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3rd Urban Peace Dialogues | Cities of Memory
Since World War II, cities have become the primary target of armed violence, experiencing the majority of casualties and devastation. It is not surprising that the local governments of some of the most affected cities gradually emerged as strenuous advocates for peace.
The 2024 edition of the Urban Peace Dialogues convened mayors and representatives of three “cities of memory”, Cassino, Dunkirk, and Dortmund. This official UNECE Forum of Mayors hybrid event featured a moderated discussion around both the destructive impact of armed violence on cities and the constructive impact of resilience, reconstruction, and reconciliation.
The event was organized in partnership with the United States Mission to the United Nations and Other International Organizations in Geneva and the Cities of Remembrance Network.
The event built on the previous editions of the Urban Peace Dialogues held at the Forum of Mayors in 2022 and 2023.
Photo Gallery
Program
Opening remarks:
- Dr. Lorenzo Kihlgren Grandi, Founding Director, City Diplomacy Lab
- Ms. Julie Perng, Senior Advisor to the Special Representative, Subnational Diplomacy Unit, U.S. Department of State
Panel Discussion:
- Mr. Enzo Salera, Mayor of Cassino, Italy
- Ms. Océane Guillon, Head of International Partnerships, Greater Dunkirk Council, and Coordinator, Cities of Remembrance Network
- Ms. Ayan Huseynova, Urban Diplomacy Officer, Department for Mayoral and City Council´s Affairs, City of Dortmund
- Dr. Lorenzo Kihlgren Grandi, Founding Director, City Diplomacy Lab (Chair)
Highlights
In his opening remarks, City Diplomacy Lab Director Lorenzo Kihlgren Grandi emphasized the unique role and message of cities of memory in international relations. That distinctiveness is based on their demonstrated ability to halt the spiral of hatred despite facing the profound injustice of massive civilian casualties and destruction. Instead, they choose “a path of resilience that has led as much to reconstruction as it has to reconciliation.”
Julie Perng, Senior Advisor to the Special Representative at the U.S. Department of State’s Subnational Diplomacy Unit, emphasized the role of local leaders in strengthening global democracy and foreign policy. “Connecting with each other is not only a powerful way to lift up our communities, but it also sends a strong message on the importance of exchange and cooperation and on local leadership to address threats to democracy and peace.”
Enzo Salera, the Mayor of Cassino, scene of one of the most destructive and deadly land battles of World War II, resulting in the destruction of the city and its famous abbey, illustrated how their annual celebrations involve students from nations who fought against each other on such territory. “Only by keeping alive and passing on the memory to new generations can we prevent the return of these events.”
Ayan Huseynova, Urban Diplomacy Officer at the City of Dortmund, presented the tragic past of her city, whose center was 95 percent destroyed during World War II, with thousands of casualties. Her remarks emphasized reconstruction efforts and the even greater importance of “rebuilding morally, regaining trust and ties annihilated, and rebuilding the bridges.” An essential role in this dynamic was played in Dortmund by cultural, educational, and artistic exchanges with cities in former enemy countries.
The message from Dunkirk, a city known not only for Operation Dynamo but also for the bombings that destroyed 70 percent of the city and its important port, was conveyed by Océane Guillon, Head of International Partnerships at the Greater Dunkirk Council and coordinator of the Cities of Remembrance Network. She recalled the importance of solidarity in reconstruction, symbolized as much by the essential contribution of British civilians in the evacuation as by the donations received for reconstruction, including that of $1 million from the American namesake city of Dunkirk (N.Y.), anticipating the Marshall Plan, “an example of how two cities can inspire nations.”
The three city representatives aligned in emphasizing the importance of city diplomacy for peace, whose pragmatic and context-specific approach provides unique tools for dialogue, aid, and reconciliation. In the current context of multiple conflicts and wars across the world, including Europe, cities of memory renew their commitment to a message of peace based on their own firsthand experience of the universality of human suffering in war. A commitment that comes with the fervent hope of soon being able to partner with cities in nations and territories currently at war on a path of reconciliation.
Recording
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Olympic Cities: Sustainable Visions and Legacies
Hosting the Olympic and Paralympic Games offers cities a remarkable opportunity to embark on bold transformations toward a better, more sustainable urban future.
Join us for an international conference exploring the innovative vision and the legacies of the Paris 2024, Los Angeles 2028, and Brisbane 2032 Games – and how they will impact urban communities worldwide.
This event is co-organized by City Diplomacy Lab, the Columbia Global Paris Center, the U.S. Embassy in Paris, and the United Nations Environment Program.
Watch the recording
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Towards inclusive (smart) city diplomacy in Africa. Lessons learned from the ASToN Network
European cities — and municipalities from developed countries, more widely — have at their disposal a plethora of opportunities to network, learn from one another, and share their experience and views at the global level. Which place, though, for the cities from the Global South, in the field of city diplomacy, once we leave the capital or the charismatic cities out? This is one of the questions the ASToN program tried to answer, looking at how African cities can be in the driver’s seat in both their digital transition and international action by joining a group of peers for three years.
By Simina Lazar
African cities are among the youngest and fastest growing in the world. While numbers vary, Lagos (Nigeria) alone is said to welcome 4000 new persons every day who are looking for better living conditions in the metropolis. Like everywhere else, this demographic increase puts enormous pressure on the infrastructure, housing, and job opportunities available, not to mention on the public services and the development of the informal market. At the same time, this presents an opportunity to do things differently, tap into Africa’s innovation and creativity, and link it with potential technology offerings by bringing people together to discuss solutions and ways forward.
Despite their energy, innovation, and creativity, African cities are not yet fully present at the table of global discussions. For example, the 2022 UN-Habitat Global Review of Smart City Governance Practice only saw 14 African out of 250 cities replying to the survey. So how can African cities make their voices heard beyond their borders when internet cuts, staff shortages or dealing with emergencies is their daily routine? While continental, ambitious initiatives are still rare and financial resources are often scarce, African city leaders can bring their unique perspectives and challenges to the international table of discussions. Here are the main lessons from the ASToN (African Smart Towns Network) program that, from 2019 to 2022, assembled 11 African cities on an experimental learning journey. The program was financed by the French Development Agency (AFD) and used URBACT methods and tools.
Building a community of practitioners across 11 African countries…
ASToN focused on the unique digital challenges brought by the cities and on the humans that represented them. By testing, learning, and iterating, a program journey was designed that was adaptive and responsive to the needs of cities. It offered a regular rhythm and balance, bringing in technical expertise and city experience. Fully aware that our initiative is a one-off, our ambition was also to create a community of people that would outlive the program.
While we were aware that the digital maturity of both institutions and the territory was variable across the network, little did we know about the cities’ previous exposure to international programs or their representatives’ participation in somewhat similar initiatives. Here again, we found a gradient of situations, from Kampala (Uganda) or Niamey (Niger) leaders, used to taking the floor in international conferences and gatherings, to Sèmè Podji (Benin) or Matola (Mozambique) representatives who were joining an international group of peers for the first time. The challenges they were confronted with are similar to many other city leaders around the world: initiatives like ours came on top of already very heavy workloads, internal procedures and hierarchy were often incompatible with the lean approach our program required, and their administrations often faced important turnovers. So, how do you build a network of peers in such a context, and more importantly, how do you make it last beyond the program’s life?
Through ASToN, we tried as much as possible to create a community and sense of collective identity and belonging between participating cities. Our assumption was that these relationships would outlive the network and spark more opportunities than we could imagine. The community can boost any other types of support that might be offered by program activities, as it allows people to take the lead and ask for what they need from one another directly[1]. Making change and doing things in new ways in a city authority can be hard. We thus designed settings that allowed city representatives to provide their counterparts with support and guidance based on their deep technical expertise and previous experiences. With turbulences like changing politics or external shocks, we also realized there could be a strong sense of peer support for when progress is hard – a feeling of being ‘in it together.’
The Agile approach that was proposed to cities to develop their digital solutions at the local level was also used as a wider framework for network activities. From the start, our commitment was to keep things moving while also being ready to close things down when needed. In doing this, we built coalitions of relevant partners who could support and inspire participating cities by organizing small thematic groups around mobility, e-tax, or land management, some of the main sub-themes of the network. We were also mindful of the fact that different cities were moving at different paces. Unforeseen shocks like the pandemics, social movements such as the 2020 Lagos #endSARS riots, or natural disasters such as the flooding that hit Niamey in early 2021 meant that some cities were absent from group activities for certain periods. Nonetheless, when able to do so, they all came back, proving how relevant the network was for them.
…and providing a platform
A key priority for ASToN from the start was communication, and it became crucial when the pandemic hit. By developing several strategic partnerships with Civic Tech Innovation Network, the UN-Habitat People-Centered Smart Cities program, or Bloomberg’s network of Chief Innovation Officers, ASToN city leaders participated in several high-level discussions. Several ASToN cities, like Bizerte (Tunisia) or Kumasi (Ghana), continue to be invited every year to such events as the Smart City Expo, speaking out not just for themselves but for their fellow African partners. Sèmè Podji joined in 2023, together with several French local authorities, a cooperation program led by PFVT focusing on digital transitions, directly contributing to the UN-Habitat Smart Cities resolution. For example, some city leaders from Nouakchott (Mauritania) decided to take on more formal training by enrolling in Master’s degrees in urban planning, smart cities, or digital transitions rolled out by African Universities.
We are also aware that the space for cooperation and exchange is closing in some parts of the world, and the possibility that some cities will have to exchange and learn beyond their borders is no longer possible today. This is the case for Niamey or Bamako (Mali), where different political visions, as well as endemic electricity shortages, make impossible the kind of work an international program requires.
What money can and cannot buy
What about the lessons learned from investing nearly 3M€ in a one-off program like ASToN? Despite the challenges encountered along the way, 9 out of the 11 cities ran pilot phases, and all of them designed digital solutions for the challenges they had identified. We organized several pitching sessions where cities presented their solutions to potential partners and investors. Nonetheless, the opportunities they were offered remained limited in comparison with what is possible for their European counterparts. If some cities advanced in developing their solutions, like Benguerir’s (Morocco) app or Kampala’s mobility solution, this was done through internal funding. For others, like Bizerte, ASToN proved to be the stepping-stone for the city to join several national initiatives, acting as a pilot case for implementing a digital one-stop shop for citizens or developing an online Services Kiosque. These are, of course, important spillover effects from an experimental initiative like ours. However, they also show the extent to which African cities are still on the receiving end, integrating investor or donor programs coming from above rather than negotiating international finance to push their strategies ahead.
The Blueprint for Running a City-to-City Cooperation Program contains all the lessons learned from designing and running ASToN, from the practical to the more strategic. It also presents tools and tips for carefully designing the onboarding method or the support and grant funding mechanism, in addition to some other points that I raised in this article.
For policymakers who are considering building such initiatives, there is one more thing I can add today, more than a year after the program ended. ASToN’s unique proposition also proved its weakness. Back in 2019, we were the only network dedicated exclusively to African cities, providing tools and resources for both local activities and network interaction. Thinking in detail about what comes after, which are the exit strategies both for cities and the program as a whole, must be at the core of such experimental programs to build lasting results. While the community continues to exist and bilateral relations grow, more resources and support are needed for African cities to bring their voice to those discussion tables where what tomorrow is made of will be decided.
[1] In the Secretariat, we would do a victory dance every time we heard about cities working together or asking for advice from one another, outside ASToN’s official communication channels.
Header image: field visit during the Kigali all-partner meeting in November 2021.
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Fostering inclusive nature-based solutions in cities across the world
The loss of nature and biodiversity due to urbanization and climate change has serious consequences for cities and the well-being of their residents. This is most evident in disasters like floods, heat waves, and smog, which disproportionately affect low-income and marginalized communities.
This second episode of the Urban Innovation to Achieve Just & Sustainable Cities series will focus on how working with nature within and around cities can protect vulnerable and low-income urban residents from climate change impacts and disasters, improve their quality of life, and reduce cities’ impacts on other valuable systems.
This session is co-organized by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) and ICLEI in partnership with Cities Alliance, UN-Habitat, Slum Dwellers International, the Centre for Affordable Housing Finance, the African Union for Housing Finance, and the City Diplomacy Lab.
In continuity with the March kick-off event on “Fostering sustainable construction in informal urban areas”, this virtual event brings together a diverse group of experts and practitioners to engage in constructive dialogue on the development of sustainable urban planning, construction, and financing strategies for cities across the globe.
Keynote: Anna Heringer, Architect
Panelists :
- Jaqueline Mueni Katu, Senior Environment Officer, County Government of Kisumu
- Ashali Bhandari, Managing Director, People’s Urban Living Lab, Transitions Research
- Julie Greenwalt, Senior Climate Advisor, Cities Alliance
Moderator: Lorenzo Kihlgren Grandi, City Diplomacy Lab
🗓 Thursday, June 27, 2024, 1:00-2:30 P.M. CEST/UTC+2
🗣 Language: English, with written translation in French and Spanish.
Watch the recording
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UNESCO Cities of Media Arts explore the latest frontiers of digital creativity
This year’s International Biennial of Media Arts (Bains Numériques) hosted by the French city of Enghien-les-Bains focused on the role of digital creativity in building more sustainable urban communities.
The local Centre des Arts (CDA95) partnered up with the City Diplomacy Lab and the French National Research Agency (ANR) to deliver a rich program featuring over 20 events. UNESCO Creative Cities representatives, scholars, and artists offered the public a unique insight into today’s urban transformations and the upcoming urban future.
Highlights
More and more cities worldwide are operating as workshops for participative, innovative, and concrete solutions to today’s major challenges, such as climate change, growing inequalities, and security. City Diplomacy Lab Director Lorenzo Kihlgren Grandi explored the impact and scope of the growing interconnection between these local practices and the emergence of city diplomacy focused on creativity and innovation.
Hiroyuki Suzuki and Makiko Tatsumi presented the Kyoto Arts and Technology Village, a new and innovative space created through a partnership between the Centre des Arts, Kyoto Prefecture, and the Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International (ATR). They offered insight into this space’s unique strategy of fostering the connection between art and technology within emerging industries.
Representatives of Campina Grande, Namur, and Novi Sad – three UNESCO Creative Cities of Media Arts – shared their experiences and vision of international city-to-city cooperation. This panel offered insight into the shift from a one-way assistance logic to an approach based on a partnership between peers for common goals, in line with the United Nations Agenda 2030.
Gwangju, known as Korea’s City of Light, joined the UNESCO Creative Cities Network in 2014. The city’s commitment to creativity is symbolized by the creation of the Gwangju Media Art Platform (G.MAP), whose task is to “draw of Gwangju’s future with media art.” G.MAP Director Lee Kyungho presented his city’s cultural ecosystem and discussed the role of the new center in making Gwangju a “city of the future.”
The International Biennial of Media Arts was an in-person-only event with English-French simultaneous translation. Free participation upon registration.
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Exploring the future of city diplomacy in Bogotá
On May 16, 2024, the City of Bogotá, a City Diplomacy Lab Advisory Board Member, hosted a global conference to discuss the future of city diplomacy with experts and practitioners from across the world.
Over the last few years, Bogotá has become a beacon of city diplomacy worldwide, as symbolized by the appointment of former Mayor Claudia López as UN-Habitat Ambassador for the New Urban Agenda and Metropolis President.
As new Mayor Carlos Fernando Galán assumed office in January 2024, he further upgraded the relevance given to this field, raising the status of the office charged with international relations from Department to District Council—a choice reflecting the mandate of serving as a cross-sectoral resource for the whole local administration. Sandra Borda, Professor of International Relations at the renowned Universidad de los Andes, was charged with heading the new body.
In convening the event, High Counselor Borda highlighted the importance of participatory design and management of city diplomacy, emphasizing the potential of city-academia collaboration in understanding and scaling up city diplomacy.
The meeting was divided into two panels, each dedicated to identifying the nature, opportunities, and challenges of city diplomacy today and discussing its possible future evolution.
🟡🔴#Hoy es nuestro encuentro: 'Internacionalización de las Ciudades: Estrategias y desafíos para el futuro’.
— Relaciones Internacionales Bogotá (@BogotaInter_nal) May 16, 2024
Un espacio para dialogar sobre la importancia de la diplomacia urbana como herramienta estratégica para la colaboración y el progreso de las ciudades a nivel global. pic.twitter.com/B1LQ34oUiHThe first panel highlighted the growing evidence of city diplomacy as an impactful multistakeholder process. Cristina Zambrano Restrepo, Executive Director of the Medellín Cooperation and Investment Agency, emphasized how “Internationalization has allowed us to transform our image. It was a collaborative effort involving academia, the private sector, and the public sector to change the previously negative image.”
Also central to the discussion was the strategic importance of multilevel cooperation in international relations. According to Sohaela Amiri, Senior Research Officer at the USC Center on Public Diplomacy, domestic and international politics cannot be understood separately. In this regard, Max Bouchet, City Diplomacy Lab Associate Fellow and Deputy Director for City and State Diplomacy at the Truman Center for National Policy, emphasized the importance of cities’ pedagogical role vis-à-vis their national government concerning city diplomacy.
The panelists also paid great attention to the role, spaces, and recognition of cities’ actions in global governance. According to Buenos Aires Undersecretary for International Relations Ana Ciuti, despite the great progress made by major cities around the world in their internationalization processes, there is still much to be done: “There are global challenges that have a direct impact on us as citizens. For this reason, cities need to open up more spaces in global decision-making bodies.”
The panel also included a focus on city diplomacy risks. Rodrigo Perpetuo, Executive Secretary of ICLEI South America, emphasized the importance of a strategic perspective on the part of cities in order to avoid the potentially distorting effect of conducting city diplomacy as a mere reaction to external stimuli.
In the second panel, City Diplomacy Lab Director Lorenzo Kihlgren Grandi provided insight into cities’ unfolding opportunities to pursue their global impact ambitions within multigovernmental processes such as COPs and the UNECE Forum of Mayors. He also emphasized how the city diplomat profession is evolving to cope with its expanding responsibilities.
The panel provided insight into the role of mayors as advocates for global social agendas and agents of political discourse. “They see internationalization as more than pragmatic aid or access to international resources,” stressed Jordi Vaquer, the Secretary General of the Metropolis. U.S. State Department’s Subnational Diplomacy Unit Adviser Natalia Cote-Muñoz linked this expanded role to the process of urbanization: “The accelerated process of urbanization has increased the role of cities in global issues. Many global problems are local and are very similar regardless of country.” Raffaele Marchetti, Vice Provost for Internationalization at LUISS University in Rome, emphasized the rising costs for cities that choose not to internationalize.
Counselor Borda concluded the event by stressing the importance of collective and participatory work to achieve internationalization processes that involve and engage citizens. “It is from the local level that citizens’ trust is recovered. Hence, it is important to see internationalization within an identity framework to collectively understand and build what we want to show the world and how we recognize ourselves,” she remarked.
For more information on Bogotá’s international action, visit this page.