城市平等与可持续发展目标:关系议程的三个挑衅

IF 1.5 4区 社会学 Q3 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
S. Butcher
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引用次数: 10

摘要

我们生活在一个日益城市化、日益不平等的世界。这一点在全球发展中国家的城市最为明显,那里的许多居民在获得重要服务、参与决策或作为公民的权利得到承认方面面临着严重的不公正。在这方面,可持续发展目标(sdg)“不让任何一个人掉队”的战斗口号具有巨大潜力,可以引导城市化进程走向更公平的结果,特别是对城市贫困人口而言。然而,可持续发展目标也面临着一系列批评,这些批评凸显了在实现变革议程方面的差距和沉默。本文探讨了采用关系视角来解读可持续发展目标的潜力,作为一种机制,以应对这些内部矛盾和批评,并建立通往城市平等的途径。特别是,如果我们想把城市平等放在议程的核心位置,它提出了三个问题:谁拥有城市;他制造关于城市的知识;谁在城市中可见?从有组织的城市贫困群体的实践中,本文概述了将这一议程导向城市平等的关系和变革目标的关键经验教训。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Urban equality and the SDGs: three provocations for a relational agenda
We live in an increasingly urban, increasingly unequal world. This is nowhere more evident than in cities of the global South, where many residents face deep injustices in their ability to access vital services, participate in decision-making or to have their rights recognised as citizens. In this regard, the rallying cry of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to ‘leave no one behind’ offers significant potential to guide urbanisation processes towards more equitable outcomes, particularly for the urban poor. Yet the SDGs have also faced a series of criticisms which have highlighted the gaps and silences in moving towards a transformative agenda. This article explores the potentials of adopting a relational lens to read the SDGs, as a mechanism to navigate these internal contradictions and critiques and build pathways to urban equality. In particular, it offers three questions if we want to place urban equality at the heart of the agenda: who owns the city; who produces knowledge about the city; and who is visible in the city? Drawing from the practices of organised groups of the urban poor, this article outlines the key lessons for orienting this agenda towards the relational and transformative aims of urban equality.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
6.20%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: International Development Planning Review’s editorial policy is to reflect international development planning policy and practice. This includes a focus on the physical, economic and social conditions of urban and rural populations. The journal explores current national and international policy agendas, achievements and strategies in this area, offering material of interest to its established academic and professional readership as well as to a broader critical audience.
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