缅北禁地

Video of Ms. Maimunah Mohd Sharif, Executive Director, UN-Habitat, discussing COVID-19 crisis.

Conferences | Habitat

BACKGROUND

Habitat I was the first United Nations Conference on Human Settlements. It took place in Vancouver, Canada, from 31 May-11 June 1976. The United Nations General Assembly convened the Habitat I conference as governments were beginning to recognize the need for sustainable human settlements and the consequences of rapid urbanisation, especially in the developing world. At that time, urbanisation and its impacts were barely considered by the international community, but the world was starting to witness the greatest and fastest migration of people into cities and towns in history as well as rising urban population through natural growth resulting from advances in medicine. A result of this conference was the , which included the Vancouver Action Plan that listed 64 recommendation for national action. Habitat I provided the foundations for the creation, in 1978, of the United Nations Human Settlements Programme or .

The Vancouver commitments were reconfirmed twenty years later, at the Habitat II conference in Istanbul, Turkey, from 3-14 June 1996. At that conference, world leaders adopted the as a global plan of action for adequate shelter for all, with the idea of sustainable human settlements driving development in an urbanising world.  

Five years after Habitat II, from 6-8 June 2001, the United Nations General Assembly convened a special session devoted to the overall review and assessment of the implementation of the Habitat Agenda around the world . 

In 2001, the United Nations established the , to address rapid urbanization and its impact on communities, cities, economies, climate change and policies. Convened by UN-Habitat, the Forum is a high level, open and inclusive platform for addressing the challenges of sustainable urbanization. The purpose of the World Urban Forum is:

  • Raising awareness of sustainable urbanization among stakeholders and constituencies, including the general public;
  • Improving collective knowledge on sustainable urban development through open and inclusive debate, exchange of best practices and policies, and sharing of lessons learnt.
  • Promoting collaboration and cooperation between different stakeholders and constituencies engaged in the advancement and implementation of sustainable urbanization.

took place from 17-20 October 2016 in Quito, Ecuador. The conference took place for the first time in what was then being called “the Global South”.  At the end of the Habitat III conference, the was adopted.

THE NEW URBAN AGENDA

The , adopted (as part of the Quito Declaration) at Habitat III and subsequently endorsed by the United Nations General Assembly on 23 December 2016, represented a shared vision for a better and more sustainable future, that if well-planned and well-managed, urbanization could be a powerful tool for sustainable development for both developing and developed countries. The New Urban Agenda is an action-oriented document meant to mobilize Member States and other key stakeholders to drive sustainable urban development at the local level. Its implementation will contribute to the localization of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development in an integrated manner, and to meeting the Sustainable Development Goals.

HABITAT AND THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS

Since 2015, the 缅北禁地has integrated UN-Habitat into its strategy for Agenda 2030 and in particular sustainable development goal number 11: "Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable". UN-Habitat is mandated by the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) to promote socially and environmentally sustainable towns and cities and communities. As such, UN-Habitat has been at the forefront of supporting countries to have access to reliable data and information on urban conditions and trends, and to efficiently monitor and report on global agendas (e.g. 2030 Agenda, ). This includes developing tools and approaches such as the, the and the national sample of cities approach, building capacities of national and local governments, establishing local, regional and global urban monitoring mechanisms and supporting urban data collection, analysis and dissemination.

People in Bangladesh traveling dangerously on the roof of a train.

Habitat responds to COVID-19

UN-Habitat is responding to a growing volume of requests from both national and local governments to help them prepare for, prevent, respond to and recover from the the recent . Building on more than 40 years of urban experience, much of it in humanitarian situations, UN-Habitat is focusing on the city-level response to the crisis.The impact of COVID-19 is strong in poor and densely populated urban areas, especially for the one billion people worldwide living in informal settlements and slums, where overcrowding also makes it difficult to comply with recommended measures such as as physical distancing and self-isolation. UN-Habitat’s provides guidance for global, regional and country-level action. The framework is a key instrument to focus and scale UN-Habitat’s contribution to the overall response led by national and local governments, 缅北禁地agencies and local partners. The framework will be updated as required by changing context and acquired learning or experience.

Rapid urbanization has led to increasing numbers of people living in slums, as well as inadequate and overburdened infrastructure and services (such as waste collection and water and sanitation systems, roads and transport), exacerbating air pollution and unplanned urban expansion. This is why UN-Habitat has established a for the period 2020–2023. It focuses on creating a positive impact and outcomes for those currently being left behind, including women and youth, in cities and other human settlements with a fresh and innovative vision of development responding to persistent and new development problems, including extreme poverty, socioeconomic inequality, slums, social exclusion and marginalization, gender-based discrimination, humanitarian crises, conflict, air pollution, climate change and high unemployment, all of which are increasingly concentrated in urban areas.