Acesse o verbete cidade / ciudad / city / cité para conhecer a lista de tipos de cidades (com a cidade justa) catalogadas e guardadas nas prateleiras da Biblioteca do Levante-BH.
Acesse o verbete cidade para todos e conheça outras utilizações dessa marca para as quais foram elaborados verbetes na Biblioteca do Levante-BH. A partir dele, acesse também o verbete a todos / de todos / para todos / todos (e derivações) e conheça outras utilizações dessas marcas para as quais foram elaborados verbetes na Biblioteca do Levante-BH.
ponto de atenção: usar esse uso conjunto de cidade para todos + cidade justa na Introdução.
possíveis novos contatos (brasileiros citados na 1ª edição, encontrados por busca de “Brazil”) para compor a rede Levante-BH: Lucas di Gioia ( p.7 da 1ª versão: organizer) / Roberto Rocco ( p.7 da 1ª versão: organizer) / Tainá de Paula (p.36 da 1ª versão: elected councillor for the city of Rio de Janeiro) / Geovana Freitas Paim, Cleonice Moreira da Silva, Geimy Katherine Urrego Diaz (UFBA: p.127 da 1ª versão) / Raquel Rolnik (p.162 da 1ª edição) / Carolina Jorge T. Guimarães, Juliana de Boni Fernandes Lara Aguiar Cunha, Luísa Fernandes Vieira da Ponte, Stelme Girão de Souza (UFCE: p.185 da 1ª edição) / Milena Andrade, Victória Almeida, Iman abou (Senac-SP: p.211 na 1ª edição).
possíveis novos contatos (brasileiros na 2ª edição) Mariana Fix (USP: p.48 da 2ª edição) /
ROCCO, R. et al. (2021): ROCCO, Roberto; NEWTON, Caroline E. L.; VERGARA d’ALENÇON, L. M.; VAN DER WATT, A.; TELLEZ ANGEL, N.; PERUMALSAMY, G. B.R.; SUBENDRAN, J.; CARADONNA, G. E. F. E.; FERREIRA, L.M.G.; PESSÔA, I.T.M. (Ed.). A Manifesto for the Just City. Delft: TU Delft Open, 2021. 277p. Disponível para baixar em: internet. Acesso em: 9 dez. 2022.
ROCCO, R. & NEWTON, C. (2021): ROCCO, Roberto; NEWTON, Caroline (Ed.). A Manifesto for the Just City. 2.ed. Delft: TU Delft Open, 2021. 404p. Disponível para baixar em: internet. Acesso em: 9 dez. 2022.
trechos das duas edições de 2021:
p.4 (1ª edição): The event upon which this book is based took place online over four days: 9, 16, 23 and 30 November 2020. Representatives from 101 universities around the world took place in the discussion, and 43 groups from 25 universities submitted a Manifesto.
p.3 (2ª edição): This workshop and lecture series took place online over four days in October 2021. Representatives from 106 universities around the world took place in the discussion. 256 students from 48 universities submitted a Manifesto.
p.63 (1ª edição): […] the manifesto titled “For Quality, Equality and Justice: a Manifesto for a New City” from Brazil had an unusually large number of negative emotional associations. […]
p.7 (2ª edição): FOR INQUIRIES Write to r.c.rocco@tudelft.nl.
p.98:
BRYAN GOH JIAN HAO / KAREN HANYANG LIU / RACHEL YI EN CHIAM / SEAN LEE KIAN HOW / SIEUN LEE / SUSHERRIE SUKI – UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON / UK [um manifesto de alunos da University College Londom UK]
p.99:
Manifesto / Overarching Pillar
A Just City is where people make cities. To achieve a Just City, the power of the people need to be collectively mobilised. To realise this collective action, equity among all is crucial to ensure everyone has the ability and willingness to vocalise their agenda, where each person can proudly claim their right to the city.
An Equitable City considers the various differences among people, rather than boxing them into ‘citizens’, which is inherently exclusive of those without formal citizenship. We must pay attention to the different experiences of diverse identity groups, for people to occupy the city and take control of how they shape their own urban experience.
p.100-101: […] 5 Key Pillars […] Sense of Community and Empowerment […]Effective Leadership […] Resilience […]
Collaboration
1. Cities cannot embark on projects alone. They must learn to collaborate with various stakeholders including the private and third sector. This helps to improve public trust and allows community resilience to be built.
2. Cities, just like a brain’s neural network, must collaborate and form partnerships with other cities. This builds on the idea of connectography, allowing people, services, resources, and knowledge to flow and grow.
3. Cities must engage and collaborate actively in mitigating climate change as climate change knows no border.
4. Cities must encourage friendly competition and encourage innovation.
Accessibility
1. Citizens should be able to access what the city offers, regardless of who they are and where they reside.
2. City governments should be accountable for making public transport, open space, cultural amenities, social infrastructure, and political participation accessible for its people. The focus should be on where these are most needed, and not where they will prove most profitable.
3. Enhancing accessibility to reliable information will uplift and empower communities, which unlocks a democratic dialogue to take place in urban planning practices.
comentário: interessante, mas muito genérico. [ponto de atenção: citar na NTL n.º 2, como algo interessante, mas por demais genérico, sem uma proposta].
No website TU Delft (link) – acesso em 09/12/2022:
Abstract
“On Monday 29 MARCH at 18:00 (CET/Amsterdam), TU Delft launched the Book “A Manifesto for the Just City“, with texts by a number of guests and 43 manifestos written by students from 25 universities from all over the world.
A “Manifesto for the Just City” comes in the wake of the realisation that socio-spatial justice is a crucial dimension for sustainability transitions. Growing inequality and the erosion of the public sphere undermine the social and political structures required to fight climate change, pandemics and other systemic shocks. With this book, we have sought to encourage students to formulate their own visions for the Just City and for a just transition.
This book is result of an Urban Thinkers Campus organised between 9 and 30 November 2020. The Urban Thinkers Campus (UTC) model is an initiative of UN-Habitat’s World Urban Campaign, conceived in 2014 as an open space for critical exchange between stakeholders and partners. It aims to promote debate and action on sustainable and inclusive urbanization upholding the principles and guidelines contained in the New Urban Agenda, launched at Habitat-III in 2016 in Quito, Ecuador”.
tradução livre de um trecho: […] Um “Manifesto para a Cidade Justa” surge na esteira da constatação de que a justiça sócio-espacial é uma dimensão crucial para as transições de sustentabilidade. […]
No website TU Delft (link) – acesso em 09/12/2022:
Synopsis
The Manifesto for the Just City comes in the wake of the realisation that socio-spatial justice is a crucial dimension for sustainability transitions. Growing inequality and the erosion of the public sphere undermine the social and political structures required to fight climate change, pandemics and other systemic shocks. At the same time, profound cynicism and scepticism have gripped our minds. This is paralysing us. Following the words of Professor Faranak Miraftab, we need to decolonise our minds, and try to imagine a different world and new kinds of relationships among ourselves and between us and the planet. This book aims to encourage students to formulate their own visions for the Just City and for a just transition.
The second volume of ‘A Manifesto for the Just City’, published by TU Delft Open and funded by the Delft Design for Values Institute, gathers texts from scholars discussing aspects of the just city (Professors Faranak Miraftab, Mona Fawaz, Mariana Fix, Romola Sanyal, Roberto Rocco and Caroline Newton) and showcases 63 manifestos written by 256 students from 48 universities all over the world.