421 research outputs found
Leave no city behind
Close to 4 billion people live in cities. As the driver of environmental challenges, accounting for nearly 70% of the world's carbon emissions, and as sites of critical social disparities, with 863 million dwellers now living in slums, urban settlements are at the heart of global change. This momentum is unlikely to disappear, as approximately 70 million more people will move to cities by the end of this year alone. The good news is that recent multilateral processes are now appreciating this key role of cities and are increasingly prioritizing urban concerns in policy-making. Yet, how can we ensure that these steps toward a global urban governance leave no city, town, or urban dweller behind
Science Diplomacy: Introduction to a Boundary Problem
Scientific advancements, their application through technological development, and world politics have been long acknowledged as affecting each other, and are today more than ever at the heart of global policy. Speaking of âscience diplomacyâ as the encounter of world politics and the world of science at the heart of these advancements might be a unique window into our time. This potential is what prompts this special issue to gather views from a variety of scholarly and practical viewpoints, linking the wellâestablished world of reflective practitioners in science diplomacy to the growing field of international relations (IR) scholars theorising this realm. Can speaking of âscience diplomacyâ situate our attention at the crossroads of science and international relations, and spur greater appreciation for their intersections? This introduction to the special issue summarises the rise of science diplomacy as field of inquiry, and casts questions as to the need to advance, where not reform, these conceptualisations. It defines science diplomacy as a âboundary problemâ par excellence and emphasises its âproductive tensionâ that emerges between the various ways of knowing of actors belonging to âdifferent social worldsâ, seeking to gather a productive tension of views on this theme in the issue
City Diplomacy: Towards More Strategic Networking? Learning with WHO Healthy Cities
Cities are increasingly capturing the attention of major international actors and now regularly feature in multilateral processes. Yet while there are many studies on networking among cities, there have been few studies of 'city networks' as formal and institutionalized governance structures facilitating city-to-city and city-to-other actors cooperation, or 'city diplomacy'. Institutionalized networks of cities, while not new, are becoming a growing presence on the international scene, almost omnipresent and perhaps even too common. Might it be time for a 'Darwinian' selection between city networking options? Diving deeper into this networked challenge, this essay focuses on the effects this networked diplomacy and overlap it might have on cities. Drawing on a research collaboration between the UCL City Leadership Laboratory at University College London and the World Health Organization's Healthy Cities Network and both a global dataset of city networks as well as qualitative focus group data, we consider the growth of these governance structures, their strengths, but also the weaknesses associated with their rapid growth, and how cities can engage with this networked landscape more strategically. In short, we argue that the potential of city networks must go hand-in-hand with more integrative and strategic thinking at both local and international levels
Science and the Future of Cities: Interim Report of the Nature Sustainability Expert Panel
This short interim report introduces the work of the
Nature Sustainability Expert Panel on science and
the future of cities. Developed in partnership by
University College Londonâs City Leadership Lab and
Nature Sustainability, and supported by UCLâs
Grand Challenge of Sustainable Cities, the expert
panel focuses on the urban science-policy interface
for global sustainability. It offers a first look into the
themes that will be developed in the upcoming
Panelâs report (July 2018). The document here
discusses existing tensions in the current global
urban science landscape and explores how those
could be overcome to make existing urban research
more responsive to global urban sustainability
challenges
Urban Observatories in the Midst of COVID-19: Challenges & Responses
In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, urban observatories
have demonstrated their value, but also highlighted the
challenges for boundary institutions between knowledge
generation and decision-making in a variety of different ways. We
aim here to capture some of their voices in a time of crisis.
The Connected Cities Lab, in collaboration with University
College London and UN-Habitat, and in dialogue with a variety of
urban research institutions around the planet, has been working
since 2018 to develop a review of the challenges and values of
and challenges for âurban observatoriesâ. That project aims to
present evidence on the boundary-spanning roles of these
institutions, capturing the ways in which they bridge information
in and about their cities and the potential value they offer to
urban governance.
As the COVID-19 crisis took hold across cities and continents in
early 2020, it became apparent that this study could not prescind
from a closer look at how these observatories had both been
coping with, but also responding to, the pandemic. This resulted
in a series of additional interviews, document reviews and a twopart virtual workshop in August 2020 with observatories, and
urban research institutions performing observatory functions, to
give further voice to these experiences.
As a background to this âdeepâ dive into the reality of COVID-19
for observatories, the overall study underpinning this working
paper has relied on, first, desktop research on publicly available
information to identify thirty-two cases of either explicitlynamed âurban observatoriesâ or else urban research institutions
performing âobservatory-likeâ functions. This research was then
coupled with a series of interviews with experts and senior staff
from these observatories to ground truth initial considerations
as well as to capture how the processes of boundary-spanning
worked beyond the publicly available persona of each
observatory. We then referred back to these thirty-two cases and
selected a sample of fourteen for specific analysis in relation to
COVID-specific interventions, with six of them involved directly
into two virtual workshops to capture directly their experience in
the context of the pandemic crisis. Capturing initial findings from
these engagements (which will ultimately form an integral part of
the projectâs final report), this working paper offers a preliminary
snapshot of some of these lessons drawn from the study.
Essential for us has been the chance, amidst the complications of
COVID-19 lockdowns and travel bans, to better capture the voice
of observatories the world over and their tangible experiences
with spanning urban research-practice boundaries in a
turbulent historical moment. Whilst the final report for the
project will likely include more extensively analysed cases
emerging from the current crisis, we have sought to present here
much of the raw reflections emerging from our engagement with
colleagues in observatories (and âobservatory-likeâ institutions) to
both offer useful reflections to other contexts around the world as
well as to offer insights on the unique situation urban knowledge
institutions find themselves in a reality where cities and urban life
has been fundamentally recast by the pandemic.
The working paper is organised in a way that follows our broader
studyâs key themes looking at the structure and activities of
observatories, putting our broader findings into dialogue with the
voices of observatories during the COVID-19 crisis.
Section 1 describes the proposed visions and functions performed
by observatories and puts it into dialogue with the COVID-19
crisis. Positionality of urban observatories is also discussed in
this section.
Section 2 explores outputs produced by, and themes investigated
in, observatories and how they have been shaped by and for the
crisis. In Sections 1 and 2 we endeavoured to capture vignettes
from the participating observatories through the experiences
of a set of six more specific interlocutor institutions engaged
in the project: the Gauteng City Region Observatory (GCRO)
in Johannesburg, the Karachi Urban Lab (KUL) in Karachi, the
Indian Institute for Human Settlements (IIHS) in Bangalore, the
Metropolis Observatory in Barcelona, and the World Resources
Institute Ross Centre in Washington DC.
Section 3 concludes with a commentary on the ongoing
challenges and opportunities faced by urban observatories in the
wake of COVID-19, without underestimating how the crisis might
be far from over
Global science for city policy
Research and data are increasingly at the heart of how we conceive of urban governance. Urban control rooms and city dashboards championed by cities like Chicago, SĂŁo Paulo, and London have been promising real-time snapshots and tracking over time of urban systems, via geolocated mobility data sets, social media inputs, environmental sensors, and other tools (1). At the international level, the importance of urban research and data has been enshrined in major United Nations (UN) processes, from the UN New Urban Agenda, the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction, and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to the World Data Forum (2). Yet overall, the global state of data-informed urban governance remains underdeveloped, often promising, as with the dashboards, more than it actually delivers. It is time for a step change. A truly global reform of scientific advice to cities must take place on multiple interconnected fronts, linking a UN action plan on science and the future of cities, a âgood adviceâ commitment by the private sector, and formalized partnerships for urban science at the local level. This scientifically informed urban reform, ripe for discussion at the upcoming UN World Urban Forum in February, can be uniquely bold in recognizing the potential of municipal action on global challenges. Despite being considered the âlowestâ level of governance, cities have developed a track record of global action on key matters like climate, disasters, and health, often surpassing, in speed, commitments, and global coverage, that of nations
A model independent and rephase invariant parametrization of CP violation
The phenomenological description of the neutral B meson system is proposed in
terms of the fundamental CP-violating observables and within a rephasing
invariant formalism. This generic formalism can select the time-dependent and
time-integrated asymmetries which provide the basic tools to discriminate the
different kinds of possible CP-violating effects in dedicated experimental
B-meson facilities.Comment: 19 pages, Plain Te
Cyber-security in smart cities: the case of Dubai
The city of Dubai emerges as a leading partner in not only technology innovation but also designed infrastructure and strategic security. There is a strategy, which will globally add the city and leadership to the leading smart cities of the world. Considering current and future challenges, the strategic aim is to "smart" wire the city of Dubai by 2020. Dubai is a city of strategic technology, innovation and management. It is a global, vibrant and emerging economy among others, that can become an economic hub of the MENA (Middle East and North Africa) region. The aim of this paper is to explore, analyze, and discuss elements of strategic management, innovation, development. It is also the aim to discuss elements of strategic security, in making the city is cyber-secure in a smart networked infrastructural and service provider, environment
Mobilising urban knowledge in an infodemic: Urban observatories, sustainable development and the COVID-19 crisis
Along with disastrous health and economic implications, COVID-19 has also been an
epidemic of misinformation and rumours â an âinfodemicâ. The desire for robust, evidence-based
policymaking in this time of disruption has been at the heart of the multilateral response to the
crisis, not least in terms of supporting a continuing agenda for global sustainable development. The
role of boundary-spanning knowledge institutions in this context could be pivotal, not least in cities,
where much of the pandemic has struck. âUrban observatoriesâ have emerged as an example of such
institutions; harbouring great potential to produce and share knowledge supporting sustainable and
equitable processes of recovery. Building on four âliveâ case studies during the crisis of institutions
based in Johannesburg, Karachi, Freetown and Bangalore, our research note aims to capture the role
of these institutions, and what it means to span knowledge boundaries in the current crisis. We do
so with an eye towards a better understanding of their knowledge mobilisation practices in
contributing towards sustainable urban development. We highlight that the crisis offers a key
window for urban observatories to play a progressive and effective role for sustainable and inclusive
development. However, we also underline continuing challenges in these boundary knowledge
dynamics: including issues of institutional trust, inequality of voices, collective memory, and the
balance between normative and advisory roles for observatories
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