| International Symposium
Addresses Sustainability, Development Issues
By Donald Miller
During the international symposium, Global
Pressures on Local Autonomy: Challenges to Urban Planning for
Sustainability and Development, held in early September in Louisville, Ky., many presentations
dealing with local efforts to advance sustainable urban development
around the world encouraged equally interesting discussions by
participants from 22 countries. The event was sponsored by the
International Urban Planning and Environment Association.
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| Academics
from around the world came to Louisville, Ky., on Sept.
4-8 to attend an international symposium on urban planning.
Shown are, from left: Beverly McLean of the University
of Buffalo in Buffalo, N.Y.; William Smith-Bowers of
the University of Westminster in London; Faith Weekly,
Community Affairs specialist at the Louisville Branch
of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; and Lynne Mitchell
of Oxford Brookes University in Oxford, England. |
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A major theme heard throughout the symposium was the necessity
to make trade-offs—the dialectics of dealing in practical
terms with sustainability. Sustainability is commonly defined
as a balance between economic, social and environmental concerns
that takes a long-term view. When these objectives are in conflict,
acceptable trade-offs are difficult to identify and agree on, but
necessary.
In addition, several sub-themes or findings frequently emerged
from the symposium sessions:
- Developed societies have as much to
learn from developing societies as the other
way around when it comes to addressing sustainable urban
development.
- A complementary relationship between replicable analysis
and direct citizen participation is a necessity
for understanding environmental issues. Also, research results
need to be presented in popularly understandable and interesting
terms to be useful and to have effect.
- Whether low-income households are located on cheaper sites
near brownfields or vice versa, environmental
problems disproportionately impact the less well-off.
- Most negative environmental impacts do not occur alone,
meaning that several kinds of pollution need
to be addressed together.
- Since the systems with which we are dealing are complex,
developing an implementation strategy for resolving
development issues increases the likelihood of a practical
and effective solution.
- Broad community involvement in initiatives for sustainable
development helps to ensure that the right
issues are addressed and to build the constituency necessary
for implementation.
Reflecting on the symposium as a whole, the most interesting
and useful presentations were based on one or more actual cases,
and so were inductive in their approach. Many participants noted
that the specific treatments of problems and responses were more
useful to them than were abstract and general presentations. Additionally,
the papers were especially interesting to participants if the presenter
had first-hand experience with the case or process, as opposed
to being a third-party observer.
This symposium provided an exceptional venue to bring together
governmental officials, representatives of nongovernmental organizations
and researchers to exchange experiences and information on how
to use urban planning for sustainability and development. The next
symposium in this series is scheduled for Bangkok in early January
2007.
Donald Miller, cofounder and chairman of the International
Urban Planning and Environment Association (IUPEA), is a professor
of urban design and planning at the University of Washington in
Seattle. The symposium was the sixth in a series, dating back to
1994, sponsored by the IUPEA. The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis,
Community Affairs, partnered with the University of Louisville
and others to bring the symposium to Louisville.
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