New urban planning

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New urban planning is a term which was coined in a position paper set out in conjunction with the Declaration of Principles and Best Practices for Sustainable Urbanization, a declaration resulting from the World Planners Congress 2006 which sought to reconnect planning with the challenges posed by rapid urbanization, the urbanization of poverty, hazards from climate change, and the Millennium Development Goals (particularly MDG 7).

According to this paper, "new urban planning" is explicitly pro-poor and supportive of social, environmental and economic sustainability. New urban planning identifies an urgent need for a transformation of capacity for governance of human settlements, given the increasing scale of refugees and slum settlement.[1]

Contents

[edit] Aims of New urban planning

New urban planning aims to:

[edit] Principles of New urban planning

The 10 principles of New urban planning are listed as;

  • 1. Sustainability
  • 2. Integrated Planning
  • 3. Integrated with Budgets
  • 4. Planning with Partners
  • 5. Subsidiarity
  • 6. Market Responsiveness
  • 7. Access to Land
  • 8. Appropriate Tools
  • 9. Pro-poor and Inclusive
  • 10. Cultural Variation[3]

[edit] Signatories to New urban planning

The position paper published in conjunction with the 2006 Declaration of Principles and Best Practices for Sustainable Urbanization was endorsed by the following signatories;

[edit] References

  1. ^ Commonwealth Association of Planners: Reinventing planning: a new governance paradigm for managing Human settlements
  2. ^ Commonwealth Association of Planners: Reinventing planning: a new governance paradigm for managing Human settlements
  3. ^ Commonwealth Association of Planners: Reinventing planning: a new governance paradigm for managing Human settlements
  4. ^ Commonwealth Association of Planners: Reinventing planning: a new governance paradigm for managing Human settlements