Peter Oborn
Moderator
Several SDGs can only be achieved through effective legislative frameworks and policies. Urban legislation has an important role to play in virtually all targets of SDG 11. It defines conditions for access to land, infrastructure, housing and basic services; lays out rules for planning and decision-making; guides the improvement of livelihoods and living conditions by setting requirements for urban development initiatives; and sets the context within which urban authorities, local governments and communities are expected to fulfil their mandate and react to emerging challenges. This is also true for SDG 10, as legislation can set meaningful frameworks for sustainable development, or it can accentuate inequalities and exclusion. Effective urban regulatory frameworks are also fundamental to promote climate smart urbanization (SDG 13) as well as promote the rule of law, develop effective, accountable and transparent institutions at all levels; and ensure participatory and representative decision-making (SDG 16).
The Commonwealth Lawyers Association, the Commonwealth Association of Architects and the Commonwealth Association of Planners are supporting the preparation of this legal checklist for cities to assist urban managers in attaining sustainability and resilience by establishing connections across a value chain encompassing, inclusive and evidence-based spatial planning, strengthened tenure security, improved local institutional capacities, and the promotion of environmentally friendly urbanization through climate-focussed human rights. It is hoped that this tool will impact 1,000 cities/1 billion lives by 2030.
This event is useful for national and local government officials, policy and climate change experts, lawyers, academia, community leaders and civil society organizations.
1. To showcase the SDG cities legal checklist which is aimed to be a user-friendly and accessible diagnostic tool to facilitate the achievement of SDGs in cities and allow for progress tracking and create city awareness on how key legislative frameworks drive sustainability and climate justice.
2. To create a platform for dialogue and peer-review of the thematic entry points of the tool (land, housing and property rights, environmentally friendly urbanization and digital governance).
3. To create a network to lobby for effective urban legal solutions and climate/human rights.