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IRGLUS NEWS | VOL. 5, NO. 2 | MARCH 2018
The newsletter of the International Group on Law and Urban Space
www.irglus.org | www.facebook.com/IRGLUS

The International Research Group on Law and Urban Space is a network of academics from diverse backgrounds – jurists, geographers, sociologists, political scientists, urban planners, environmentalists, who are doing research and/or are interested in the interface between law and urbanisation. 
Introduction:

Dear IRGLUS members,

A belated welcome to 2018. May the year prove to be a productive and exciting one.

It certainly started with a bang - in this issue, Marius Pieterse reflects on the activities at the World Urban Forum held in Kuala Lumpur in early February. While events of this nature have their drawbacks, the Forum certainly showed that there is a great amount of work to do for all involved in creating better cities for all.  Much as the law did not occupy centre stage in Kuala Lumpur, we know this also to be true for us.

As usual, the year ahead holds some interesting prospects.  IRGLUS has curated a conference session on law and urban space at a forthcoming conference on Law and Citizenship Beyond States, to be held in Lisbon during September 2018, organised by the Research Committee on Sociology of Law, a committee of the International Sociological Association, of which IRGLUS is an official working group. We hope to also be announcing details of other events soon. Meanwhile, members who are organising academic events in law and urban space should feel free to draw on the IRGLUS network in a direct or indirect manner - also be reminded that we are happy to feature your events, other initiatives, research projects and the like on the IRGLUS website, Facebook group or in future editions of this newsletter.

All the best 
Thomas Coggin and Marius Pieterse
Global Co-ordinators

  

Reflections:
World Urban Forum 9 - Kuala Lampur
Marius Pieterse 

The 9th World Urban Forum, the international community's premier urban conference, took place in Kuala Lumpur from 7-13 February 2018. The first such forum since the adoption of the New Urban Agenda ('NUA') at the similarly prestigious Habitat III conference held in Quito in 2016, the Forum was logically dedicated to the NUA's implementation.

Eclectic, hectic and humid Kuala Lumpur, at once emblematic of urbanisation's triumphs and its challenges, was an apt background for the event, while its' many attractions and truly exquisite street food provided ample distractions from the programme.

The event itself was predictably overwhelming. With a record-breaking 25 000 delegates, both the programme and the venue were packed. For seven days in a row, a plethora of plenary sessions, high-level roundtables, academic sessions, networking events, training events and side events took place, constantly and simultaneously, across four floors of the massive Kuala Lumpur convention centre, with as much high-level talk happening in the hurried walks between venues as during the sessions themselves.

 As the official summary bulletin of the event attests, every conceivable topic related to the NUA and the Sustainable Development Goals ('SDGs') was covered, with national, regional and local governments, international organisations, social movements, NGOs, think-tanks, research organisations, as well as individual academics, urban practitioners and government officials of every ilk, all contributing.

As often happens at such massive events, many of the high-level sessions offered little opportunity for actual reflection, with rows of extremely important people near-mechanically moving across well-lit stages and intimidatingly large backdrop video screens, each to recite a 4-minute-or-less national/regional/local/multinational/institutional commitment to the NUA and the SDGs.

This tone of abstract commitment predictably filtered through to the text of the Kuala Lumpur Declaration, adopted at some point towards the end of proceedings and seemingly made up entirely of action verbs ("strengthening", "encouraging", "building", "adapting", "deploying", "recognizing" and so forth) strung together with adjectives (such as " integrated", "inclusive", "coordinated", "collaborative", "creative", and "innovative"), with "challenges" feeling like its lone meaningful noun.

The meatier discussion took place in the smaller, less star-studded sessions and events, of which, fortunately, there were many. These offered plenty food for thought and many actual examples, considerations or suggestions of attempts to make sense of the challenges and opportunities of cities, in relation to the various worthy targets that they must aim to achieve. 

It is also in these sessions (and, it felt, only there) that the law featured, as backbone to systems of urban governance, as mediator of urban conflict, as grantor of urban rights and as building block of sustainable and resilient cities.

I noticed that the legally inclined participants, including a number of IRGLUS members, tended to congregate in the same sessions, almost forming a (albeit multi-streamed and quite diverse) conference within a conference.

I decided early on to navigate the overbearing conference programme by following members of UN Habitat's excellent urban law and legislation unit and their affiliates through the range of sessions and events in which they participated. Inevitably, these sessions yielded worthy and thought-provoking discussion over the need for, and the quality and characteristics of, good urban laws, processes and systems. 

Overall, I was often struck by how absent the provisions of the NUA (itself the product of an event of similar scale and nature, and accordingly rightly open to the criticism of proclaiming everything and nothing at the same time) was from the discussion over its implementation, with most delegates seemingly regarding it as a long-winded elaboration of SDG 11, and instead focusing their efforts and deliberations over its implementation on the much more concrete, and therefore perhaps inevitably superior, SDGs.

Regardless of which is the chicken and which the egg, achievement of the NUA and (almost all of) the SDGs is clearly intertwined, so this is not itself problematic. But maybe it does point to the need for better delineated and workable plans and targets, instead of further ambitious commitments, in striving towards resilient, inclusive and sustainable cities for all.

Marius Pieterse

Reminder:
Fifth Annual International & Comparative Urban Law Conference
São Paulo, Brazil - June 21st & 22nd, 2018

Call for Conference Participants

The Fordham Urban Law Center, in partnership with the Mackenzie Presbyterian University (MBU), is pleased to announce a call for participation in the Fifth Annual International and Comparative Urban Law Conference. 
 
The Conference will be held on Thursday June 21st and Friday June 22nd, 2018 at MBU in São Paulo, Brazil.   

The deadline for proposal submissions has been extended until Tuesday, 20 March 2018.

Since 2014, the Conference has welcomed leading scholars from a range of urban law perspectives to present their research.  Now in its fifth year, the Conference will build on this tradition, again providing a dynamic forum for legal scholars from around the globe to engage diverse international, comparative, and interdisciplinary perspectives on the intersection of cities and law.  

The Conference will address urban law topics in areas such as:

  • The structure and functions of local authority and autonomy
  • Urban and metropolitan governance, finance, and urban political economy
  • Economic and community development
  • Housing and the built environment
  • Challenges facing cities in developing nations and the Global South
  • Migration and citizenship
  • Urban equity, inclusion, and urban public health
  • Sustainability, climate change, and resilience.

The Conference seeks to facilitate engagement across sub-specialties within the legal academy and across legal systems internationally to help deepen our understanding of urban law in the twenty-first century.

PROPOSAL SUBMISSION:  Please submit a proposal (maximum 500 words) to Fordham Urban Law Center, at urbanlaw@law.fordham.edu.  Please put "[name of proposed paper]" in the subject line of your email. If you have a draft paper, please include it with your proposal. Participants do not need to have prepared a formal paper in order to join the program.  The Center is also pleased to be able to award partial travel grants for this Conference, although funds are limited.  Please indicate the extent of your funding needs.  

Congratulations!

We would like to congratulate IRGLUS member Stephen Berrisford whose publication - Reforming Urban Laws in Africa: A Practical Guide, co-authored with the late Patrick McAuslan - was a winner in the Dubai International Award for Best Practices to Improve the Living Environment. 

Drawing on the authors’ combined experience of over 70 years of work on urban legal reform in Africa, the guide is written from the starting point that the process of urban legal reform is absolutely essential to ensure the successful implementation and uptake of the law. The guide considers how the law is written, who is involved and what information is taken into account by the drafting team and the combined effect of these factors in determining whether the law is likely to achieve its desired outputs.

The guide was recognized in the category: University Research Award on Legislation, Rules, Regulations & Governance Systems. The guide may be accessed in English here, and in Portuguese here.
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