Mexico City—Ambitions and Challenges of Integrated Risk Management in a Fractured Urban Planning Context

Soledad Garcia Ferrari, Emma R. Morales, A. Bain
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Abstract

Among the growing number of megacities, Mexico City stands out for its size and population, but also for its challenges with respect to environmental risk management, fractured governance and marked contrasts in urban conditions. In the last couple of decades, Mexico City has been praised for pioneering new management structures for planning and policy development, driving an approach rooted in a strong social commitment and sustainability agenda, with more integrated decision-making across government institutions. Among these instruments is the recent Law of Integrated Risk Management and Civil Protection of Mexico City, which boldly steps ahead of national legislation, moving from a reactive to a precautionary approach to disaster risk under the banner of stakeholder co-responsibility. However, this paper shows that Mexico City has also been the stage of innovative policies that have been hijacked by the powerful, tainted by corruption and reinterpreted to fit financial interests, or simply abandoned with the arrival of new administrations. The efficiency of these innovative strategies has therefore thus far been limited by discretionary practices and poor communication and socialisation. Our research over the past 5 years has explored risk management processes in Mexico and Mexico City through a transdisciplinary investigation of the vulnerability to climate change-related hydro-meteorological risks in low-income urban areas, and the capacities to manage risk at the community and institutional levels. Drawing on this research, this paper describes a range of accomplishments in urban and environmental policy innovation in Mexico City in recent years with relevance to risk management, and the opportunities for learning arising from the challenges, limitations, and failures. The paper argues that, despite extensive existing knowledge of the socio-technical elements of risk in the city, in particular in relation to hydro-meteorological and seismic risks, fragmented urban development policies and institutions have contributed to increasing the vulnerability of poor communities in high-risk areas of the city. The paper concludes that addressing the challenges of integrated risk management in this fractured urban planning context will require that the recently-created institutions are adaptive, to cope with evolving socio-economic contexts and physical hazards, build strong links with academia to harness social and technical knowledge, design long-term plans integrated across tiers of government to increase coordination, and generate strong and inclusive engagement of the city’s heterogeneous communities. These elements are crucial to allow Mexico City’s ambitions of integrated risk management to survive political cycles and avoid appropriation by short-term financial interests over real risk reduction.
墨西哥城——支离破碎的城市规划背景下综合风险管理的抱负与挑战
在越来越多的特大城市中,墨西哥城因其规模和人口而脱颖而出,但也因其在环境风险管理、治理断裂和城市条件显著差异方面的挑战而脱颖而出。在过去的几十年里,墨西哥城在规划和政策制定方面开创了新的管理结构,推动了一种植根于强烈的社会承诺和可持续发展议程的方法,并在政府机构之间进行了更综合的决策,因此受到称赞。在这些文书中,最近通过的《墨西哥城综合风险管理和公民保护法》大胆地走在了国家立法的前面,在利益攸关方共同责任的旗帜下,对灾害风险从被动应对转变为预防性。然而,本文表明,墨西哥城也是创新政策的舞台,这些政策被权贵劫持,被腐败玷污,并被重新解释以适应经济利益,或者随着新政府的到来而被抛弃。因此,到目前为止,这些创新战略的效率受到了自由裁量做法以及沟通和社会化不良的限制。在过去的5年里,我们通过对低收入城市地区气候变化相关水文气象风险脆弱性的跨学科调查,以及社区和机构层面的风险管理能力,探索了墨西哥和墨西哥城的风险管理过程。根据这项研究,本文描述了近年来墨西哥城在城市和环境政策创新方面取得的一系列与风险管理相关的成就,以及从挑战、限制和失败中获得的学习机会。该论文认为,尽管对城市风险的社会技术因素有广泛的了解,特别是与水文气象和地震风险有关的知识,但分散的城市发展政策和制度加剧了城市高风险地区贫困社区的脆弱性。该论文的结论是,在这种支离破碎的城市规划背景下,解决综合风险管理的挑战将要求最近创建的机构具有适应性,以应对不断变化的社会经济背景和物理危害,与学术界建立牢固的联系以利用社会和技术知识,设计跨各级政府综合的长期计划以加强协调,并在城市的异质社区中产生强大而包容的参与。这些因素对于使墨西哥城的综合风险管理雄心能够经受住政治周期的考验,并避免被短期金融利益占用,而不是真正的风险降低,至关重要。
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