Friday, January 3, 2014

A Call to Cityzenship

In conjunction with the upcoming Abu Dhabi sustainability week, Masdar is conducting a blogging contest concerning cities and sustainability, learn more about it at www.masdar.ae/engage. With some reflection about the bigger picture of civic engagement that will be necessary to foster true change, here is my entry addressing the following question:



"How can cities contribute to the advancement of sustainable development and address issues including water, energy and waste?"




A new social contract is needed – let’s call it “cityzenship” – because no city can develop sustainably without the active participation of its inhabitants.

No man or woman is an island, and that holds true for the collections of people that have gathered together into cities for several millennia. In the past it had been easy to think our cities as entities unto themselves, vibrant ecosystems that had the power to leave the problems of the outside world outside their city walls, border or moat, so long as the people inside had their basic needs met.

That thinking is long outmoded as cities have become the living destination of choice for over half of the globe’s inhabitants. We now understand that every city, and every person in that city and beyond, is part of a bigger interconnected system that spans the entire planet. Issues of availability of water and energy and the elimination of waste are global problems that can best be administered locally, but understanding that deeper connection from city to city and person to person is crucial to allowing that to happen in a sustainable manner. To that end city dwelling must not only come with benefits and rights but responsibilities as well – explicitly spelled out responsibilities of “cityzenship” – that move beyond the current mode of disincentives for bad behavior that local governments currently employ.

Why do people choose to live in cities? Because the congregation of people and services there fill their individual needs better than anywhere else. Whether consciously or not, every individual makes a choice to stay or go in their city every single day, while the city remains; building and maintaining the infrastructure that makes it possible to meet those personal needs and make those choices possible.

Cities – via their leaders with the agreement of current inhabitants – should determine the core principles concerning sustainability that it will expect its residents and visitors to live by. These responsibilities need not be burdensome, but thoughtfully coherent and purposeful.

Cities and nations already make such demands of their people but in an inefficient, piecemeal and implicit manner, such as laws concerning maximum shower flow rates here, waste collection surcharges there, electricity billed as a constant rate that comes from who knows where, et cetera. There is little coordination that makes a “cityzen” feels as if their individual actions are part of a bigger whole, and cities can facilitate the change toward that.

Each city will define their priorities differently, but they must ask more of their cityzens, while helping them understand their actions can contribute to a greater local and planetary good. Taxes and surcharges can curb undesirable behavior of course, but let’s go the extra step too and make the positive impacts of living in concert with a city’s sustainability principles local and explicit.

Let’s tie meeting conservation or waste reduction targets to speeding up the provision of expanded community services. Construction of a new park or community center would be accelerated if certain targets were met ahead of schedule. How about rolling out free wireless internet access faster or more thoroughly if landfill diversion percentages go up faster than expected? The possibilities are numerous and can provide a visible link between individual sustainability behaviors and the responsive city that encourages them.

People choose to be in cities – to become cityzens - because they want to be part of something that is much bigger than them. Cities can more visibly and creatively let them know that is true when it comes to sustainability.

Pete Langlois
3 January 2014

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