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United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Sustainable Development
Topics

Sustainable cities and human settlements

Description

Human settlements

Cities are hubs for ideas, commerce, culture, science, productivity, social, human and economic development. Urban planning, transport systems, water, sanitation, waste management, disaster risk reduction, access to information, education and capacity-building are all relevant issues to sustainable urban development.

In 2008, for the first time in history, the global urban population outnumbered the rural population. This milestone marked the advent of a new 'urban millennium' and, by 2050, it is expected that two-thirds of the world population will be living in urban areas. With more than half of humankind living in cities and the number of urban residents growing by nearly 73 million every year it is estimated that urban areas account for 70 per cent of the world's gross domestic product and has therefore generated economic growth and prosperity for many.

Given the importance of this topic to global development efforts, recent movements pushing to address sustainable development from an urban perspective have taken place throughout the world. Results from this movement can be seen in the inclusion of a stand-alone goal on cities and urban development in the 2030 Agenda, Sustainable Development Goal 11, "make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable". There is also recognition of the cross-cutting nature of urban issues, which have an impact on a number of other Sustainable Development Goals, including SDGs 1, 6, 7, 8, 9, 12, 15, and 17, among others. UN-Habitat's complementary New Urban Agenda, adopted as the outcome document from the Habitat III Conference in 2016, seeks to offer national and local guidelines on the growth and development of cities through 2036.

Prior to the adoption of the 2030 Agenda, Millennium Development Goal 7, target 11, made a call for efforts to achieve, "a significant improvement in the lives of at least 100 million slum dwellers" by 2020.

Sustainable human settlements development was also discussed at the second and third sessions of the Commission on Sustainable Development. "Promoting sustainable human settlements development" is the subject of Chapter 7 of Agenda 21, which calls for 1) providing adequate shelter for all; 2) improving human settlements management; 3) promoting sustainable land-use planning and management; 4) promoting the integrated provision of environmental infrastructure: water, sanitation, drainage and solid waste management; 5) promoting sustainable energy and transport systems in human settlements; 6) promoting human settlements planning and management in disaster-prone areas; 7) promoting sustainable construction industry activities; and 8) promoting human resource development and capacity-building for human settlements development.

Paragraph 89 of the 2030 Agenda calls on major groups and other stakeholders, including local authorities, to report on their contribution to the implementation of the Agenda. Local and regional governments have a wealth of valuable experience in the "localization" of the 2030 Agenda, where they provide leadership in the mobilization of a wide range of stakeholders, the facilitation of "bottom-up" and inclusive processes, and the formation of multi-stakeholder partnerships.

For more information and documents on this topic, please visit this link

Displaying 106 - 120 of 277
Title Category Date Sort ascending
Saudi Arabia Debate on Sustainable cities and human settlements, Sustainable Consumption and Production, Climate 3-Apr-2014
Solomon Islands Debate on Sustainable cities and human settlements, Sustainable Consumption and Production, Climate 3-Apr-2014
Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) Debate on Sustainable cities and human settlements, Sustainable Consumption and Production, Climate 3-Apr-2014
Tanzania Debate on Sustainable cities and human settlements, Sustainable Consumption and Production, Climate 3-Apr-2014
Cyprus, Singapore and United Arab Emirates Debate on Sustainable cities and human settlements, Sustainable Consumption and Production, Climate 3-Apr-2014
India Debate on Sustainable cities and human settlements, Sustainable Consumption and Production, Climate 3-Apr-2014
Denmark, Ireland and Norway Debate on Sustainable cities and human settlements, Sustainable Consumption and Production, Climate 3-Apr-2014
Montenegro and Slovenia Debate on Sustainable cities and human settlements, Sustainable Consumption and Production, Climate 3-Apr-2014
Major Group: Local Authorities Co-chairs' meetings with Major Groups 10-Jan-2014
Major Group: Women Co-chairs' meetings with Major Groups 8-Jan-2014
Australia, The Netherlands and United Kingdom Sustainable cities and human settlements, sustainable transport 8-Jan-2014
France, Germany and Switzerland Sustainable cities and human settlements, sustainable transport 8-Jan-2014
Argentina, Bolivia and Ecuador Sustainable cities and human settlements, sustainable transport 8-Jan-2014
Serbia Sustainable cities and human settlements, sustainable transport 8-Jan-2014
Nepal Sustainable cities and human settlements, sustainable transport 7-Jan-2014

Paragraph 89 of the 2030 Agenda calls on major groups and other stakeholders, including local authorities, to report on their contribution to the implementation of the Agenda. Local and regional governments have a wealth of valuable experience in the "localization" of the 2030 Agenda, where they provide leadership in the mobilization of a wide range of stakeholders, the facilitation of "bottom-up" and inclusive processes, and the formation of multi-stakeholder partnerships.

Please follow this link to see a list of reports from local authorities.