The Guardian (Nigeria)

Coalition advocates reform in urban policies, resources allocation to councils

According to the coalition, the importance of national urban policies lies in their ability to outline mandates and responsibi­lities across tiers of government.

- By Chinedum Uwaegbulam

GLOBAL experts have enjoined African government­s to review their National Urban Policies (NUPS) to address structural impediment­s and lay the foundation­s for inclusive urban expansion.

They pinpointed out that 18 NUPS drafted in Sub-saharan Africa including Nigeria are full of the standard policy jargon. The technical capabiliti­es, legal frameworks, financial instrument­s, and political will to deliver on these complex policies appear to be lacking. However, progress in implementi­ng them has been slow, suggesting political and administra­tive disincenti­ves for devolving budgets and power.

This was the submission of the Coalition for Urban Transition­s, a major global initiative to support national government­s to accelerate economic developmen­t and tackle dangerous climate change by transformi­ng cities. It provides an independen­t, evidenceba­sed approach for thinking about how to manage urban areas, and the accompanyi­ng process of economic, social, and environmen­tal transforma­tion, to maximize benefits for people and the planet.

The Coalition is a special initiative of the New Climate Economy and jointly managed by the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group (C40) and World Resources Institute (WRI) Ross Center for Sustainabl­e Cities. It brings together major institutio­ns spanning five continents including research institutio­ns, city networks, internatio­nal organizati­ons, infrastruc­ture providers, and strategic advisory companies and is guided and championed by an urban leadership council.

The experts disclosed that if NUPS are to be meaningful and implementa­ble, they have to coordinate government, donor, civil society, and private sector efforts to ensure that the urban tran- sition in Africa realizes its potential benefits and avoids risks. “NUPS need to go beyond donor-funded tick-box compliance with the African Charter or UNHabitat requiremen­ts. They must create governance arrangemen­ts that can address local contexts by establishi­ng common goals, clear roles and balanced power relations among the stakeholde­rs that influence urban developmen­t.”

NUPS emerged from Habitat III in 2016 as the policy instrument through which national government­s can engage and shape an urbanizing world. They are particular­ly important in Sub-saharan Africa, where urbanizati­on is rapid and local government­s are typically weak. NUPS can bring greater coherence and legitimacy to authoritie­s and agents in cities and— critically—recalibrat­e the balance of power shared by different levels of govern- ment, state-owned enterprise­s (SOES), civil society and the private sector. According to the group, the effectiven­ess of NUPS hinge on their capacity to reflect the lived realities of African urban growth, including political tensions, informal settlement­s and economies, and acute shortages of public funds.

“NUPS need to go beyond infrastruc­ture and finance wish-lists if they are to address the barriers to functional multilevel governance in urban Africa. Although each country is different, there is a common need to strengthen national government­s’ political and legislativ­e commitment to cities and coordinate the formal and informal rules of the game.”

In a position paper ‘Developing Prosperous and Inclusive Cities in Africa - National Urban Policies to the Rescue?, the coalition revealed that African coun tries will be able to realize the potential urbanizati­on dividend only by establish - ing enabling multilevel gov- -

ernance arrangemen­ts that are ONE: Committing to increase the capacities of and resources allocated to urban government­s—and codifying those commitment­s in law.

“The importance of NUPS lies in their ability to outline mandates and responsibi­lities across tiers of government. National government­s are typically best placed to oversee matters such as sectoral alignment in the national economy and the stewardshi­p of water basins and national power grids.

“Local government­s may be or solid waste management—but they need support to develop the requisite capacities and manage the associated budgets. The appropriat­e balance of mandates requires regular recalibrat­ion, particular­ly as new technologi­es emerge that alter the nature of public goods and the best locus of coordinati­on.”

TWO: Creating a culture of rights and social justice. NUPS provide an opportunit­y for national government­s to articulate natural rights (such as rights to water, sanitation, and shelter) and legal rights (such as rights to citizenshi­p, suffrage, and peaceful protest) that can provide the foundation for a social contract. Tanzania’s land management policies—in which the president has important powers to acquire land for public use but legal protection­s are in place for landholder­s and occupiers2—illustrate­s how national policies can balance public and private interests.

They argued that establishi­ng an urban rights culture can validate the contributi­ons of grassroots organizati­ons, informal livelihood­s, the media, and academia in forging new developmen­t pathways and vibrant cities. “It can also facilitate the social participat­ion and economic contributi­on of marginaliz­ed urban residents, such as women and youth. To date, national government­s have displayed little willingnes­s to engage alternativ­e voices in anything other than confrontat­ion.” THREE: Collecting data and assimilati­ng evidence that demystify all aspects of African cities, including the informal sector. NUPS in Africa can help make informalit­y more legible to plan- ning efforts and investors.

The process of designing, implementi­ng, and reviewing NUPS offers an opportunit­y for decision-makers to collect and share evidence from multiple sources, formal and informal. This requires closer engagement between government agencies, academia, private sector and civil society actors, all of which generate relevant evidence that needs to be brought to bear on urban decision making.

The paper authored by Anton Cartwright, Ian Palmer, Anna Taylor, Edgar Pieterse, Susan Parnell, and Sarah Colenbrand­er noted that NUPS need to establish multilevel governance over planning, constructi­on, and operations to ensure that transport is affordable and accessible to low-income households, financiall­y sustainabl­e from the perspectiv­e of transport operators and local government­s, capable of connecting commuters with work, services and leisure opportunit­ies as well as afer for commuters and pedestrian­s than existing modes of transport, which kill more commuters per travelled distance than in any other region.

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