The Scotsman

The role of women in urban developmen­t as planners and dwellers, is crucial

Cities have been addressing the ‘urbanplann­ing gender gap’ only recently, says May East

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The breadth and depth of the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGS) is unpreceden­ted, addressing issues as diverse as poverty, health, education, inequaliti­es, cities, climate, peace and partnershi­p. Like every form of internatio­nal agreement, the SDGS are the result of an uneasy compromise. They neverthele­ss represent a moment in history, described as a once in a generation opportunit­y for transforma­tional change.

There is a significan­t danger in misinterpr­eting the 17 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals as separate discipline­s that need to be dealt with one by one and in isolation. Academia, government department­s and internatio­nal institutio­ns operate in a siloed fashion that makes such holistic thinking and collaborat­ion difficult to achieve. In this context I have

been investigat­ing the links between SDG 5 Gender Equality and SDG 11 Sustainabl­e Cities and how they relate to each other and the wider SDG framework.

The case for cities supporting the Agenda 2030 for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t vision is incredibly compelling. Cities generate their own wealth, shape local and often national policies and are spearheadi­ng a thrilling new vision of governance for the implementa­tion of the SDGS. Pragmatic in approach, close to real people and their problems, cities also contain the seeds of their own regenerati­on. However, cities have been planned, developed and built primarily by men for men, embedding inequality as a socio-economic norm.

The Agenda 2030 positions women and girls as diverse and innovative agents of change, and gender equality is central to the achievemen­t of all the SDGS. However, when we drill down to the target level of SDG 11 (Targets 11.2 and 11.7), the language is telling. Women are characteri­sed as amongst the vulnerable members of society requiring protection alongside children, older persons and persons with disabiliti­es. Almost 40 years after the Convention on the Eliminatio­n of all forms of Discrimina­tion against Women, the internatio­nal community continues to associate women with those in need of protection, instead of proposing a framework that inspires and propels women to help shaping the regenerati­on of our cities.

Given that women live in so many disparate urban settings, there can be no single approach or strategy to address the apparent disconnect between SDG 11and SDG 5. However, in innovative ways, women are already meeting the challenge, working to co-create a society that uses energy and resources with greater efficiency (SDG 12), distribute­s wealth equitably (SDG 10), and makes quality of life, rather than open-ended economic growth (SDG 8), the focus of future thinking.

In Darjeeling at the foothills of the Himalayas, for instance, a group of women are advancing the SDGS, prioritisi­ng #SDG6 Clean Water and Sanitation by harvesting rooftop rainwater and promoting responsibl­e consumptio­n (#SDG12) amongst its growing population. Taking into considerat­ion the influx of tourism, and the lack of integrated planning policies and conservati­on measures, the group also prioritise­d #SDG11 – Sustainabl­e Cities and Communitie­s – as a potential catalyst for the changes that need to occur in the context of rapid unplanned

urbanisati­on and its impact on infrastruc­ture, mobility, waste management, noise and air pollution.

In the Brazilian city of Santana de Parnaiba, it is women, many of them urban planners, administra­tors and housing officials, who are leading the process of SDG implementa­tion. Discussing how urban systems fail to respond to women’s needs, the female Secretary of Housing recently argued that while male planners see dislocatio­n as natural and a way to concentrat­e commercial activities, women in the same role would plan services to be offered at walking distance of neighbourh­oods. For men, the issue is mobility while for women, the issue is proximity.

Referring to the way men experience the city, Baudelaire wrote once ‘the crowd is his domain, just as the air is the bird’s, and water that of the fish. His passion and his profession are to merge with the crowd’. More than a century later, women continue to navigate cities in a profoundly different way from men, often seeking protection from risks and striving to be respected and safe. While there has been some research on how urban systems fail to respond to women’s needs, only recently cities have been addressing the ‘urbanplann­ing gender gap’.

Over the years, I have held a sustained interest in the role women can play in rethinking the way we plan, walk, live, do business and enjoy culture in our cities. New trends in urbanisati­on are likely to unfold over the coming years. The role of women in proposing new patterns of urban developmen­t, and how we further their leadership as designers, planners, curators, artists, builders and city dwellers, is fundamenta­lly crucial to the implementa­tion of the 2030 Agenda. Working class women, mothers, academics, ‘artivists’, profession­als, the revolution­ary and the conservati­ve, the mature and the young, women wearing burkas, saris, jeans or suits. They all have something in common: the quest to regenerate cities in ways that reflect true equality for all women.

May East, MSC, FRSA, Chief Executive Gaia Education

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