FIG PUBLICATION NO. 33
MARRAKECH DECLARATION
Urban-Rural
Interrelationship for Sustainable Development
Organised by |
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Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Executive Summary
1. Introduction
2. Contextual Focus
2.1 Urban-Rural Linkages
2.2 Urban Sprawl and Rural
Migration
2.3 Land Policy
2.4 Land Development
3.
Institutional and Governance Concepts
3.1 Objective
3.2 Context
3.3 Guidance
3.4 Lessons Learnt
3.5 The Way Forward
4. Land
and Natural Resource Infrastructure
4.1 Objective
4.2 Context
4.3 Guidance
4.4 Lessons Learnt
4.5 The Way Forward
5. Capacity
Assessment and Development
5.1 Objective
5.2 Context
5.3 Guidance
5.4 Lessons Learnt
5.5 The Way Forward
6. Marrakech Declaration
Bibliography
Orders of the printed copies
The 2nd FIG Regional Conference “Urban-Rural Interrelationship
for Sustainable Environment”, held in Marrakech, Morocco, 2–5 December 2003, was
organized by the Ordre National des Ingénieurs Géomètres-Topographes (ONIGT) and
the International Federation of Surveyors (FIG). The conference was co-sponsored
and supported by the Arab Union of Surveyors (AUS) and the Arab Urban
Development Institute (AUDI) and several United Nations agencies, the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), United Nations Centre for
Human Settlements (UN-HABITAT), United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP)
and United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA).
The aim of the conference was to shed some light on selected
issues of urban-rural interrelations and to raise awareness of this complex
topic. It also tried to explain the close linkage of land policy and land
administration.
Currently the urban-rural interaction agenda is broad and covers
a number of concerns. The interaction consists of the exchange of goods and
services, people, information, and money that can be provided by adequate
infrastructure, such as transportation, communication, energy and basic
services. Infrastructure is the backbone of the urban-rural development.
However, its provision often involves a trade-off of land and natural resources:
roads, trails and power lines have negative impacts especially to rural areas by
cutting the landscape. Provision of this crucial infrastructure needs to balance
the interests of both rural and urban communities. This will ensure their common
future.
Due to the different functionality of land for the human being,
different land policies and land administration can be observed between urban
and rural areas in many countries. However, while sustainable land development
for both areas is a complex mix of political, legal, socio-economic and
ecological aspects, the well-being of human habitation in rural and urban space
can be achieved only by a common land policy and the adoption of a comprehensive
land policy to support sustainable land management.
Many international governmental and non-governmental
organizations have accentuated the need for both a common land policy for rural
and urban areas and a holistic thematic approach to enable the sustainable
development of land and to ensure human well-being.
As with previous publications of the International Federation of
Surveyors (FIG) – some published together with partners like the United Nations
– this publication is stressing a specific topic of global interest and
importance. FIG as a Non Government Organisation (NGO) wants to contribute to
the United Nation’s millennium goals of building a more sustainable, just and
peaceful world. The Marrakech Declaration reflects the findings and
recommendations of the 2nd FIG Regional Conference held in Marrakech, Morocco in
December 2003. It is intended to support politicians, senior managers,
professional organizations and decision makers in their efforts to enable a
balanced coexistence of a sustainable nature and a liveable habitat.
Even though the guidance and lessons learnt are tailored to the
situation of urban-rural interrelations in African and the Arabic countries,
they can be adapted to the specific requirements of urban-rural spaces all over
the world including Europe where there is currently an intensive discussion
taking place around this unsolved topic.
The Marrakech Declaration has been prepared by an expert group appointed
at the Marrakech Conference. This group was chaired by Gerhard Muggenhuber
(Chair of FIG Commission 3, Spatial Information Management; Federal Offi ce
of Metrology and Surveying, Austria). The members of the group were:
- Stig Enemark University of Aalborg, Denmark [primary author responsible
for section 5]
- Mohamed Ettarid Institut Agronomique et Vétérinaire Hassan II, Rabat,
Morocco [primary author responsible for section 4]
- Rob Mahoney Business Information Management, United Kingdom [primary
author responsible for section 3]
- Reinfried Mansberger University of Natural Resources and Applied Life
Sciences Vienna, Austria.
The document is based on the papers presented at the 2nd FIG Regional
Conference in Marrakech, Morocco, December 2–5, 2003. Especially the keynote
presentations given by Univ.-Prof. Holger Magel, President of FIG on
“Urban-Rural Interrelationship for Sustainable Development” and Dr. Don Okpala,
Chief, Urban Economy and Finance Branch and Acting Director, Monitoring and
Research Division, UN-HABITAT on “Promoting the Positive Rural-Urban Linkages
Approach to Sustainable Development and Employment Creation: The Role of
UN-HABITAT” have provided essential information in the preparation of this
document. Further other keynote presentations and introduction papers
at this conference have been of great benefi t to this declaration. These
especially included papers from Dr. Chukwudozie Ezigbalike (UNECA), Prof. Paul
van der Molen, Chair of FIG Commission 7 (Cadastre and Land Management), David
Palmer (FAO), Prof. Stig Enemark (Denmark), Abebe Solomon Haile (Ethiopia) and
Yaacoub Saade (Lebanon).
It should be noted that throughout this publication, the two-word key term,
urban-rural, used to designate our spatial context has been created deliberately
to follow no specific pattern in terms of word order. This is considered
important in order to do away with the mind-set that gives, in writing or
speaking, precedence to either of them.
I would like to remind readers of the ever lasting truth contained in the
words of the former French Prime Minister Edgar Faure who said: “If rural areas
cannot breathe any more then the cities will suffocate.”
The launch of the Marrakech Declaration is to take place at two important
events: the 2nd World Urban Forum in Barcelona, 13–17 September, 2004 and the
Inter-regional Conference on Strategies for Enhancing Rural-urban Linkages
Approach to Development and Promotion of Local Economic Development in Nairobi,
1–4 October 2004.
On behalf of the FIG I would like to thank the members of the expert group
and all the specialists who have contributed to this publication for their
constructive and helpful work.
Univ.Prof. Dr.-Ing. Holger Magel
President of FIG
August 1st 2004
Discovery consists of seeing what everybody has seen
and thinking what nobody else has thought
Albert Szent-Györgyi
The objectives of the 2nd FIG Regional Conference “Urban-Rural
Interrelationship for Sustainable Environment”, held in Marrakech, Morocco, 2–5
December 2003, were divided into a number of themes covering the most
significant aspects of the Urban-Rural Interrelationship to enable FIG to make a
realistic and pragmatic input into an agenda that is increasingly being
recognised at the international level.
The conference recognised that the issues associated with the Urban-Rural
Interrelationship manifest themselves differently in different regions around
the world and that it is necessary to have guidance in the form of general
principles that can be adapted to specific circumstances. The key issues focused
upon in this declaration are: The urban-rural linkages; including urban sprawl
and urban migration. UN- HABITAT estimates that 60% of the world’s population
will be living in urban areas by 2015. The Marrakech Declaration recommends that
comprehensive national land policies need to be developed and implemented if the
issues are to be addressed in a co-ordinated and timely manner. These policies
need to be built upon sound professional experience. It is against the
background of these developments and discussions that UN-HABITAT and UNEP call
for an end to the urban-rural dichotomy. There is a need to promote urban-rural
linkages and in this context the dynamic nature of these issues means that the
past is not necessarily a good guide to the future and it is essential to engage
in new and innovative solutions if these issues are to be addressed in time.
This document concentrates on three key interrelated and overlapping sub
issues of: Institutional and Governance Concepts; Land and Natural Resource
Infrastructures; and Capacity Assessment and Development. Each section provides
guidance; lessons learnt, and sets out a way forward for each issue. The
Marrakech Declaration recognises that these issues can not be solved in
isolation and this document is intended to contribute to the holistic vision
required to bring about improvements in the urban-rural interrelationship.
Countries are encouraged to take appropriate action in accordance with the
Marrakech Declaration on Urban-Rural Interrelationships.
Marrakech Declaration on Urban-Rural Interrelationships
The International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) and its partners at the
Marrakech Conference recognises the urban-rural divide in different areas of the
world and believes that a commitment to address this issue is essential for
acceptable human living conditions throughout the world.
The Marrakech Declaration recommends the development of a comprehensive
national land policy which should include:
- Institutional and governmental actions required for providing good
governance.
- Land administration infrastructures for steering and control of land
tenure, land value and land use in support of sustainable land management.
- Tools for capacity assessment and development at societal, organisational
and individual level.
FIG and its partners at the Marrakech Conference understand that good
urban-rural interrelationships for sustainable development are a central aspect
of sustaining good governance world-wide. It is against this background that
non-governmental organizations such as FIG contribute at the global, regional,
national and local level to improve the economic, social and environmental
balance required as a basis for human well being.
Marrakech Declaration
Urban-Rural Interrelationship for Sustainable Development
International Federation of Surveyors FIG
August 2004
ISBN 87-90907-32-9
Now there is one outstandingly important
fact regarding the spaceship earth, and that
is that no instruction book came with it.
R. Buckminster Fuller
Indications are that the movement from rural to urban life is set to continue
and escalate in the coming decades. There has been a tendency in the past to
maintain a strict segregation between projects in the urban and rural
environments. This is an understandable differentiation, though one of the
consequences of this segregation is that large areas of land are in transition
from rural to urban as populations migrate towards urban developments to satisfy
the need for employment and potential improvement in quality of life.
It is now widely recognized that there exists an economic, social and
environmental interdependence between urban and rural areas and a need for a
balanced and mutually supportive approach to the development of the two areas.
The discrete consideration of rural development as completely distinct from
urban development is no longer valid and is replaced by the urban-rural linkage
development approach Urban-rural linkage generally refers to the growing flow of
capital (public and private), people (migration and commuting) and goods (trade)
between urban and rural areas. It is important to add to these activities the
flow of ideas, the flow of information and the flow of diffusion of innovation.
Multidimensional aspects of urban-rural interrelationships
The linkage is not only in a topological sense of neighbourhood. A
multidimensional, interdisciplinary approach is required for improving the
development. Only a sustainable use of natural resources with a thematic linkage
of economic, social and environmental urban-rural interrelation can provide the
basis for human well-being.
Adequate investments in infrastructure
Adequate infrastructure, such as transportation, communication, energy and
basic services, is the backbone of the urban-rural development linkage approach.
Adequate investment in infrastructure, particularly transportation
infrastructure, improves rural productivity and allows access to markets, jobs
and public service by both men and women.
Human habitation can no longer be conceptualised as simply rural and urban
Mega cities and villages represent only the very extreme ends of a continuum.
Neglecting the potential of improving the living conditions in small towns would
ignore the majority of human living space of the future. It is important
therefore that governments at both national and local (municipal) levels
recognize the impact of their development actions on urban and rural areas and
the positive role policies can play in poverty alleviation. There is a need to
gain better under standing of the relationship between rural and urban areas and
the variety that exists in the nature of these linkages.
Regional and thematic diversity
Lack of differentiation makes solutions impossible. Global observations can
no longer be used as generalized inputs leading to a standardized global action
plan. Countries, regions and thematic challenges cannot be targeted equally. The
human mind often creates categories like ‘urban-rural’for differentiation
purposes leading to a continuation continuum by default, for example some
approaches to provide adequate categories refer to:
- Mega cities with fast development with focus on economic success
(typically in Asian regions)
- Human habitation with land use planning as a governmental approach to
coordinate development (typically for European regions)
- Rural-urban development with a mainly rural focus and little coordination
in the phase of urbanization (African and Latin American approach)
Differentiations like the above, however, bear the risk of neglecting the
spatial as well as thematic interrelation. Emphasis should now be placed upon
replacing the current inadequate categorization with something better. Any
decision making has to consider the fact that we are all sitting in the same
spaceship, ‘earth’ This document describes a basis for decision-making for
sustainable urban-rural living conditions by focusing on improvement based on
three pillars:
- Institutions and Governance
- Land and Natural Resource Infrastructures
- Capacity Assessment and Development
In the ideal situation human cooperation within a cultural agglomeration
develops Good Governance and Good Land Policy, leading to sustainable
urban-rural living conditions – a simplified view of this interrelationship is
shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1: A simplified view of the urban-rural
interrelationship.
(Graphic: Stig Enemark.)
Knowledge is of two kinds. We know the subject ourselves,
or we know where we find information upon it.
Samuel Johnson
The issue of the urban-rural divide includes a number of key issues such as:
- The urban-rural linkages. The relevant issues here refer to the
difference in needs for urban versus rural areas, and the demand for a
balanced political approach in serving these needs in terms of building
sustainable urban and rural infrastructures.
- Urban sprawl and rural migration. The relevant issues here refer to
the problems within the urban fringe, and the demand for a comprehensive land
policy to deal with these problems in terms of building sustainable land
tenure and land-use control systems.
These issues manifest themselves differently in different regions of the
world; this is especially evident looking at the developed world versus
developing countries and countries in transition. The question of how to ensure
that all countries are targeted equally is complex and the response will vary
according to the level of maturity and to the quality and quantity of skilled
people in the country. Recommendations to address the key issues related to the
urban-rural divide can, therefore, be presented only as principles.
The migration from the rural to urban and the resulting sprawl in the
semi-urban environment impacts towns, cities and mega cities. The concept of
movement from the rural environment to the urban is conceptualised in Figure 2.
Figure 2: Conceptual diagram.
(Graphic: Stig Enemark.)
Considering economic, demographic and environmental similarities that exist
between rural and urban areas there is a need to promote an urban-rural linkages
development approach which posits urban and rural areas as the two ends of the
human settlements continuum. Thus, current discussion on the rural dimension of
sustainable urban development should emphasize policies that are supportive of
urbanization while addressing the challenge of increasing investment in
physical, economic and social infrastructures that are necessary for improving
rural productivity and access to markets. While accepting the inevitability of
urbanization, people remaining in rural areas should be guaranteed decent
standards and conditions of living. This must be achieved in ways that are
acceptable to them and their way of life.
Figure 3: Rural village, Malawi, 2002.
(Photo: Stig Enemark.)
Rural development should not be based on policies that deter rural-to-urban
migration but rather on the need to improve economic and social conditions of
rural population and the need for the rural areas to effectively contribute to
the national economic growth through increased agricultural and non-agricultural
productivity. An improved rural infrastructure is a necessary condition for
improving productivity in rural areas as well as for enhancing access of
agricultural produce to both urban areas and the export market. This brings to
the fore the urgent need for developing countries to design and implement
realistic urban-rural and spatial infrastructure policies within the context of
a set of coherent national human settlements policies. In many developing
countries, addressing urban-rural infrastructure gaps requires therefore more,
rather than less, government action as stated by Don Okpala at the Marrakech
Conference.
The old orthodoxy of a discrete and dichotomous approach to urban development
as distinct from rural development no longer accords with reality, considering
the complementary functions and flows of people, capital, goods and services,
employment, information and technology between the two areas. Rural and urban
areas are economically, socially and environmentally interdependent.
There is no longer any alternative to a decisive urban-rural policy. Rural
representatives and rural areas see and need the towns as “centres or engines of
economic growth”. Cities for their part should see and need rural areas as
indispensable and independent living spaces. Both should practice equal
partnership. Wherever, often for political reasons, one-sided development has
been encouraged or permitted, equilibrium has been lost as stated by Prof. Magel
in Marrakech in 2003.
By the words of the Secretary General of the UN ECOSOC Session 2003 in
Geneva: it is necessary, “after a period of neglect to bring back rural
development to the centre of the development agenda, noting that the world’s
rural areas are where the needs are greatest and the suffering most acute.” This
message is particularly important for Africa, because this is where for a long
time to come the majority of the population will live in rural areas.
Urbanisation of rural areas is often also understood to mean the adoption of
city ways of living and increasingly of city ways of thinking. The OECD agenda,
instead, promotes the concept of a city region or even of the composite city
which covers both urban and rural areas and which seeks to achieve a common
regional or even national competitiveness by inter-communal cooperation.
Against the background of these developments and discussions it is not
surprising that UN-HABITAT and UNEP call for an end to the urban-rural
dichotomy. There is instead a need to promote urban-rural linkages.
The industrial development and the rise of capital during the last century
have led to the development of large cities. In developing countries this urban
growth is even higher due to higher birth rates. The lack of basic services in
rural areas has drawn rural populations to cities, a migration that has a
negative effect upon rural and agricultural community, and at the same time
deteriorated the urban environment and reduced the quality of life as the
infrastructure is insufficient to support such large populations (leading to
what can be called “rurbanisation”).
The urban-rural interrelationships have not always been all positive or
beneficial to both ends of the spectrum. Cities and their metropolitan
extensions absorb productive agricultural land, exploit water resources, pollute
the rural environment and act as sinks for urban waste. On the other hand,
cities rarely expand and build up efficiently. There often remain extensive
rural areas within cities and their metropolitan boundaries, giving rise to the
phenomenon of urban villages with a prevalence of urban farming.
According to UN-HABITAT estimates, 60% of the world’s population will be
living in urban areas by 2015. It is further estimated that 90% of the
population increase between now and 2015 will be in urban areas. Most of that
increase will be in the inner-city slums and squatter settlements of developing
countries.
Figure 4: Informal settlement, Cape Town, South
Africa, 2001.
(Photo: Stig Enemark.)
In all countries, urban centres or central places should wherever possible be
promoted, developed and opened up in rural areas; and activity referred to as
‘decentralised concentration’. This makes for greater stability and corresponds
better to natural ecological principles. One-sided megacentres, those focusing
primarily on the urban populations requirements, are mostly the result of a lack
of such stable network structures in rural areas. They are more and more
becoming places of widening divisions between fenced-off islands of the “have”
people and the growing slums of the “have not” people. In these circumstances no
one should be surprised at increasing criminality.
Urban centres and rural communities should speak openly and without
preconceived ideas about how they can support, supplement, relieve or strengthen
each other, e.g. in the context of transport and environmental problems, in
controlling the using up of open spaces, in promoting renewable energy, in joint
economic and tax policies to attract the necessary investors and capital. The
OECD has clear ideas on this: “Increasing the competitiveness of regions
involves improvements in both urban and rural areas”. It is thus a matter of
having a joint location policy. It is a matter of working together instead of
working against each other, as has for so long been the practice. And it is a
matter of developing a balanced and polycentred urban system and of a new
relationship between town and country as described by Prof. Magel in 2003.
With a view to rapid growing mega cities and agglomerations a regional
settlement structure has to be designed which combines density, mixing of
different land uses, polycentrality and capacity of public mass transport
systems and public facilities. These are the prerequisites for achieving the
ecological, social and economic targets of sustainability.
The priority must be to slow down the urban growth. In order to do this the
living conditions and the economic basis in the rural areas must be
strengthened, to prompt the inhabitants to stay there. Therefore it is a vital
necessity to promote new forms of cooperation between cities themselves and
between the cities, towns and the villages at the regional level.
Land policy is concerned with using and conserving land so as to meet social
and economic objectives. It works by establishing tangible private and public
objectives, for example by promoting equal access to property for all people
while respecting the sensitivity of local needs and requirements. It is
concerned with the allocation of resources, particularly rights to use the land,
so as to obtain maximum efficiency consistent with the natural environment and
the welfare of the community, both in the short and longer term.
Land policy consists of a whole complexity of socio-economic and legal
prescriptions that dictate how the land is to be used and how the benefits from
the land are to be shared. It should provide a balanced and integrated framework
within which the needs of both urban and rural societies can be met, addressing
both the land and land-related resources such as water, forests and soils. A
balance must be struck between the exploitation, utilization and conservation of
the land as a resource in a way that will meet the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. The
primary objective of land policy is sustainable development.
Land administration provides the context for determining, recording, and
disseminating information about ownership, value and use of land when
implementing land management policies as described in the UN-ECE Land
Administration Guidelines. The existence of an adequate legal framework for land
planning and land use rights will enhance the ability and capacity of the land
administration system to serve societal needs from both the government and the
citizen perspective.
Rules and regulations in land administration need to be applied through
operational systems and processes regarding the tenure, value and use of land.
Regulations should include:
- allocation of land rights, delimitation of boundaries, ways of transfer
from one party to another through sales, leases, loan, gift and inheritance,
and conflict resolution;
- control of land use, planning and enforcement, conflict resolution;
- valuation, by gathering revenues through valuation and taxation, and
conflict resolution.
Land registration and cadastre should be seen as part of the operational
level of Land Administration, which provides systems and processes to facilitate
the application of land related rules and regulations.
Control of land use is mainly provided through preparation and adoption of
zoning plans and connected land-use regulations to be enforced by central and
local government. Planning, development and control are, in this way,
interrelated components of land use control.
Decentralisation of land-use planning and decision making immediately raises
the question of suitable local institutions and organisations for managing these
tasks. Such local institutions and organisations must be able to handle
conflicts in a very concrete and direct sense. In the context of sustainability,
the conflict between immediate gains and needs on one hand, and the concern of
future generations on the other, is of course crucial. This relates to the core
content of the term “sustainable development” defined as “development which
meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs” by the World Commission on Sustainable
Development (1987). Access to land and access to housing are now recognized as
being central to social cohesion and a key factor for sustainable development.
There is no longer any alternative to the introduction and use of a decisive
urban-rural land policy. In order to re-build and develop an equilibrium in
urban-rural interrelationships we need poverty reduction in rural and urban
areas, basic infrastructure and secure tenure in rural and urban areas, village
renewal programmes and urban renaissance, sustainable land use and resource
management in rural and urban areas.
In the Potsdam Declaration Rural 21, (2000) it is stated that appropriate
framework conditions must be created and secured so that rural areas can develop
as multifaceted areas for living as well as for economic and cultural
activities. In order to secure the sustainable development of living conditions,
answers to the manifold social, economic and ecological challenges must be
found. The key to a viable and sustainable development of rural areas lies in
the development of specific prospects, the development of endogenous potentials
and the exchange of experience with other regions. Development strategies must
adequately reflect the diversity of starting conditions as well as the
opportunities and bottlenecks for development. It must be possible for regional
and local actors to respond to their problems with as much flexibility as
possible.
In terms of land development special attention must be given to the rural
areas in order to balance urban growth and migration. In this regard the Potsdam
Declaration provides some important recommendations for sustainable development
of rural areas such as:
- Establishing a specific national policy for rural areas;
- Combating poverty, securing food supplies, and overcoming inequality;
- Investing in people and creating more and better jobs;
- Guaranteeing access to land and productive resources and settling
conflicts over land use;
- Conserving natural life support systems and integrating environmental
aspects into all policy areas;
- Establishing a balanced partnership between urban and rural areas;
- Creating an efficient infrastructure and ensuring access to it;
- Securing efficient multifunctional agriculture and forestry; and
- Ensuring good governance and participation.
However, it is not sufficient to focus solely on rural areas even though
these often contain a large number of difficulties and deficiencies. There is
also the need to focus on urban and urban-rural-linkages. The “urban 21
declaration” expressed this very clearly:
- Cities and other levels of government should adopt effective urban
policies and planning processes, which integrate the social, economic,
environmental and spatial aspects of development;
- Cities should strive to alleviate poverty and meet the basic needs of
their citizens by promoting economic opportunity and enabling community
action;
- Cities should establish forums, bilateral and multilateral partnerships to
facilitate networking;
- The mutual interdependencies between cities and regions, between urban,
rural and nature reserves should be respected; and
- The national governments should give the urban land development a high
priority.
In Europe there is a very well defined balanced between urban and rural
(land) development achieved through the introduction of successful programmes
for rural and urban areas.
New opinions are always suspected, and usually opposed,
without
any other reason but because they are not already common.
John Locke
Good governance provides the opportunity with which a population and those in
a position of leadership can maintain transparency, accountability and
responsiveness for the management of major, social, economic and environmental
issues. The ultimate aim of good governance in this case is to provide effective
leadership to support the development of sustainable human settlements in the
face of the projected migration and subsequent merging of the urban and rural
environments.
Governance needs to establish clearly identifiable focal points in addition
to well defined areas of responsibility to ensure public and commercial
confidence in decision making. The successful and coordinated governance of the
urban-rural interrelationship is one of the critical challenges facing the world
in the 21st century. Governance of these multi faceted issues and the associated
data is critical for successful delivery. Key amongst these challenges is the
fact that the professional skills required to provide appropriate governance do
not lie in one profession alone and there is a need to bring together
professionals from a variety of disciplines. There is clear evidence that
appropriate and efficient institutional structures and governance concepts used
in support of key principles are an essential part of the innovations required
to successfully master the future (Magel, Athens, 2004).
Good governance of the urban-rural interrelationship involves the interaction
of complex political, social, economic, environmental issues, planning controls,
land availability and an efficient land market. Integrated policies across the
urban-rural divide are essential if the pressure on land and social facilities
are to be adequately addressed. The pressures associated with rapid development
mean that anti corruption measures must be put in place to provide public trust
and confidence in all matters associated with planning and fiscal policy. In
creating these policies due diligence should be taken to ensure equality of
opportunity for gender and minority groups is established.
Recognition of the immediate need to develop a sustainable interrelationship
between urban and rural environments brings with it the need to assemble,
utilise and coordinate knowledge from a number of professional disciplines.
Effective means of providing open access to all information relating to policies
and decisions on the urban-rural interrelationship will contribute towards
increased trust in high level political, economic and social decision making.
It is important to create a structure of governance that can be readily
adapted over time. The development of the urban-rural interrelationship is such
that the nature of the interrelationship will change over time and governance
that is appropriate at the start may not be suitable as the interrelationship
matures and new demands and challenges materialise.
The past is not necessarily a good guide to the future. This is one of the
most significant challenges facing the governance of the urban-rural
interrelationship. Analysis of past experiences however, should enable the
professional community to learn lessons and design appropriate structures of
governance to accommodate the needs of the future. One criterion that must be
met is that the governance structure must be created to provide the flexibility
for downstream modification as the requirements change to meet the needs of the
urban-rural interrelationship.
There is a need to establish a single point of focus and responsibility for
the governance of urban and rural environments at the corporate level to
coordinate, regulate and monitor, together with establishing appropriate levels
of vertical and horizontal co-operation.
Experience shows that there is a need to:
- Create an authority with responsibility at the highest level. Urban-rural
interrelationships are complex and without a single focal point responsibility
will be dissipated and ineffectual.
- Ensure that technical solutions do not dominate good governance. There is
a tendency to allow the technical issues to dominate complex project
relationships. The end focal point in the delivery of urban-rural
interrelationship projects must always be paramount.
- Maintain a holistic approach to urban-rural interrelationships that
includes a balance between top-down and bottom-up approaches. The
multi-disciplinary nature of the urban-rural interrelationship requires
constant review to ensure that all groups have been included in the
governance.
- Establish external audit and review procedures. There is a risk that the
urban-rural interrelationship will become introspective and in order to
maintain objectivity a process of regular audit and review should be
instigated at the earliest stage.
- Maintain vertical and horizontal working practices. The complexity of the
urban-rural interrelationship means that mainly vertical communications will
lead to horizontal communication failures and vice versa. Processes must be
initiated to ensure both good vertical and horizontal communications and
working relationships.
- Create multi-disciplinary projects, working groups, task forces with
responsibility for specific short term activities which disband once a project
has been completed. There is a risk that maintaining these groups beyond their
usefulness reduces the effectiveness of good governance.
- Create a regular and frequent dialogue between urban and rural
representative. Forums provide a facility to share ideas and exchange
information. Without these forums there is a risk of disengagement and
subsequent disillusionment with the representative process
Organisational
- Establish a single authority for the coordination and development of
integrated policy matters and dissemination of information into the public
domain;
- Ensure a single focal point of responsibility at the highest level for all
bodies associated with the urban-rural environment;
- Create regulations and associated monitoring and enforcement activities.
- Establish an interdisciplinary governance structure at the corporate level
with clearly defined roles and lines of responsibility. This should include:
custodians of land information; municipality departments (e.g. urban and rural
planners, transportation specialists, and engineers); inward investors in both
the urban and rural environments; community users; and Information Technology
/Information System specialists.
- Provide facilities and responsibility to address anti-corruption policies
at all levels.
- Provide facilities and responsibility for equality of gender and minority
groups.
- Providing facilities to enable the creation and maintenance of effective
land markets, and the associated access to appropriate credit and financial
systems.
Technical
- Establish appropriate standards for communications: data standards,
formats, and exchange protocols.
- Establish a meta-database with access to all groups (keep as simple as
possible).
- Establish and maintain a technical issues register.
Administrative
- Establish administrative group responsible to a single authority.
- Establish wide publicity network and keep under constant review.
- Where appropriate establish web site and maintenance facilities.
- Establish business processes to support the exchange and distribution of
information.
- Establish horizontal and vertical groups to maintain effective
communications.
- Establish and maintain an issues register.
Where observation is concerned, chance
favours only the prepared mind.
Louis Pasteur
The land has always been recognized as a primary source of power and wealth.
This fact stems from its capacity to draw and attract investment and to be an
asset from which different natural resources are harvested.
In developing countries, higher birth rates, lower agricultural productivity
and lack of basic services are factors that contributed to massive rural
migration and extensive urbanization. Uncontrolled human activities have put
enormous pressure on natural resources deteriorating the quality of life for
those with limited wealth.
Statistics from UNEP (1999) are alarming in this respect: “by 2025,
two-thirds of the world’s population will live in water-stressed conditions –
with irrigated agriculture accounting for 70–75% of fresh water use.
Human-induced degradation of the soil has already affected 20% of the world’s
dry lands and puts the livelihoods of one billion people at risk. More than half
of the world’s population lives within 60 km of the shoreline. One-third of
those coastlines are already damaged by population stress and infrastructure”.
As developing countries are facing continuing land shortages and resource
scarcity, the imperative challenge is to design and implement an adequate
infrastructure coherent in all its aspects, physical, institutional, legal and
technical, that are able to meet and support actions to attain the goals of
sustainable development. There is also a need to better manage and plan land use
and to design simple and efficient institutional and legal frames that may
stimulate land markets and promote land transfers in part to respond to the
changing societal needs and to the implementation of adequate human settlement
policies.
Systems advocated for the management and administration of land should be
able to respond and expand to meet the challenges of everyone’s needs without
compromising the non-renewable resources.
As the tensions between human behaviour and their negative impacts on natural
resources are worsening, national and international communities have to commit
themselves to the global plans of actions arising from different summits,
declarations and UN and other organizations initiatives.
To forge such political commitments that will help ensure the success of
advocated actions, a dialogue among key actors and professionals from a variety
of disciplines is necessary.
The management of land and resources is central to most societies. The
critical issue is to find a balance between the economic and environmental
forces, where the human being remains both the problem and the solution. The
extreme urbanization witnessed during the last century has drawn large rural
populations. Such migration has many justifications, some of which are:
- Lack of basic services and inadequate infrastructure in rural areas, and
for the rural population, cities constitute a symbol of wealth and well-being.
- Inequitable access to land for indigenous peoples and minority groups,
including the provision of and access to appropriate credit facilities.
- Degradation of soils induced by uncontrolled human activities and frequent
drought periods, which put the livelihoods of rural population at risk in some
countries where water became a scarce resource.
The failure of governments to develop holistic approaches and equitable
national land policies and integrated practices has put much pressure on land
resources. Resources are becoming more and more scarce and fragile, this will be
a primary cause of poverty thus compromising the survival of future generations
as clearly emphasised by all UNEP statistics and reports.
Government actions on land administration should evolve beyond the
traditional sectorial approaches and to a better understanding of the
urban-rural interrelationships and the intimate relationships between land,
infrastructure and resources. Advocated actions should take into account the
differing needs and desire of the population. Experience shows that only a
combination of regulatory and voluntary approaches can encourage sustainable
development and commit people to its success.
For integrated approaches, there is a need to strengthen the information base
through the setting up of spatial data infrastructures to support
decision-making and to implement uniform and standardized methodologies and
indicators to assess the results achieved.
Experience shows that there is a need to:
- Ensure that sufficient information is available on natural resources. This
is difficult to obtain in most developing countries, due to the lack of a
database infrastructure and a number of other factors. In most countries,
“information is power” and most professional groups try to protect their own
short term interests by retaining information. This remains a primary barrier
to the development of integrated actions. Decision makers are not using
appropriate information tools to help them identify areas subject to
development actions and where investments in infrastructure and services could
have the greatest impact.
- Establish integrated approaches. Projects and actions operated by local
groups sometimes deviate from their initial goals for administrative and
elective purposes without long-term targets being re-established or
prioritised.
- Empower local communities. When designing and implementing policies,
citizen-based participatory planning and design is an efficient way to ensure
the population becomes part of the process.
- Establish transparency of decision making, information and good
governance. Corruption encourages illicit practices that bypass advocated
policies and regulations.
- Establish alternative revenue generation mechanisms to reduce the risk of
longer term problems, for example: cutting down of forests to generate revenue
has led to shortages of fuel wood and building materials. To alleviate the
pressure on forests, it is necessary to find alternative revenue generation
mechanisms and alternative energy sources for rural populations.
- Establish land evaluation practices. Due to the urbanisation rhythm and
lack of adequate regulations and land evaluation, urban tissues are expanding
into good agricultural areas. Good land evaluation practices would act to
reduce the development of agricultural areas.
- Establish appropriate and viable land markets, together with supporting
financial systems and legislation. Having a formal structure in place is
necessary but not sufficient to trigger greater wealth, for land markets to
work there must be political empowerment.
- Establish a forum for the discussion and subsequent enhancement of land
management practices. Having identified and well documented practices provides
one basis for the propagation of good practice at a number of levels.
- Establish standardized methodologies and processes to collect the
information, and promote better channels for its dissemination to ease its
access by decision makers.
- Bring professionals from different disciplines together to agree on common
quantifiable and measurable indicators to assess the performance of the
system.
- Prior to any action, launch consultations in order to initiate and promote
a more informed dialogue among key actors so as to forge global commitment
that will help ensure the incorporation and co-operation of all concerned
parties as part of the plan to be adopted.
- Information is a central component regarding the process and
implementation of environmental decisions. The key factor is to explain to the
concerned population why a particular policy is being planned and what the
benefits are, before discussing the means by which it can be achieved.
- Promote multi-disciplinary approaches of land management and define clear
objectives and tools to assess the results.
- Clearly identify the types and sources of conflicts surrounding the
management of natural resources.
- Define and monitor indicators for land development (rural areas, urban
areas, areas of transition urban-rural).
- Introduce effective land markets and appropriate access to credit.
Common sense is the best distributed commodity in the world,
for every man is convinced that he is well supplied with it.
René Descartes
Good governance, comprehensive land policies, and sound land administration
and land management institutions are essential components for addressing the
problems related to the urban-rural divide. Both an efficient land market and an
effective means of land-use control must be developed as the basic tools for
achieving a sustainable approach. However, in many countries, and especially
developing countries and countries in transition, the national capacity to
manage the urban-rural interrelations is not fully developed in terms of mature
institutions and the necessary human resources and skills.
In this regard, the capacity building concept offers some guidance for
analysing and assessing the capacity needs and for identifying an adequate
response to these needs at social, organisational and individual levels.
Capacity Building – what is it?
The term capacity building is relatively new, emerging in the 1980s. It has
many different meanings and interpretations depending upon who uses it and in
what context. It is generally accepted that capacity building as a concept is
closely related to education, training and human resource development (HRD).
However, this conventional understanding has changed over recent years towards a
broader and more holistic view, covering social, organisational and educational
aspects.
UNDP offers this basic definition: “Capacity can be defined as the ability of
individuals and organizations or organizational units to perform functions
effectively, efficiently and sustainably.” Capacity is seen as two-dimensional:
- Capacity Assessment or diagnosis is an essential basis for the
formulation of coherent strategies for capacity development. This is a
structured and analytical process whereby the various dimensions of capacity
are assessed within a broader systems context, as well as being evaluated for
specific entities and individuals within the system. Capacity assessment may
be carried out in relation to donor projects e.g. in land administration, or
it may be carried out as an in-country activity of self-assessment.
- Capacity Development is a concept that is broader than HRD since it
includes an emphasis on the overall system, environment and context within
which individuals, organisations and societies operate and interact. Even if
the focus of concern is on a specific capacity with an organization to perform
a particular function, there must nevertheless always be a consideration of
the overall policy environment and the coherence of specific actions with
macro-level conditions. Capacity development does not, of course, imply that
there is no capacity in existence; it also includes retaining and
strengthening existing capacities of people and organisations to perform their
tasks.
The more complete definition offered by the UNDP and also the OECD for
capacity development is “… the process by which individuals, groups,
organisations, institutions and societies increase their abilities to: perform
core functions, solve problems, and define and achieve objectives; to understand
and deal with their development needs in a broader context and in a sustainable
manner.” This definition is generally accepted and adopted by various donors.
Capacity building for improving urban-rural interrelations
It is generally understood that security of land tenure, efficiency of land
markets, and effectiveness of land use controls as essential parts of land
management are crucial components in any land policy. These activities rely on
some form of land administration infrastructure that permits the complex range
of rights, restrictions and responsibilities in land to be identified, mapped
and managed as a basis for policy implementation. In this context there is a
whole range of capacity building and HRD principles and options to be
considered.
Improvement of urban-rural interrelationships implies adoption of long-term
strategic actions. This includes: formulation of political objectives; adoption
of relevant land development policies and policy instruments for implementation;
establishment of the legal framework for dealing with land development issues in
general and especially the urban-rural divide; establishment of an adequate
institutional infrastructure where the tasks and responsibilities are clearly
defined and based on a decentralised approach; development of the necessary
human resources and skills for dealing with these issues in national and local
government and in society in general; and finally, development of professional
bodies such as a national institution of surveyors being responsible for the
development and control of professional standards and ethics, enhancement of
professional competence, and interaction with governmental agencies to develop
the optimal conditions and services.
Capacity development in society can, in this regard, be addressed at three
levels as outlined by UNDP:
- The societal level, which includes the political objectives, land
development policies and policy instruments, and the legal framework.
- The organisational level, which includes the institutional
infrastructures, good governance, spatial data infrastructures, ITC, and
professional institutions.
- The individual level, which includes human resources and skills
through education and training and continuing professional development (CPD)
activities.
Adoption of a comprehensive policy on land development is crucial since this
will drive the legislative reform which in turn results in institutional reform
and finally implementation with all its technical and human resource
requirements.
However, capacity building is not a linear process. Whatever the entry point
is and whatever the issue currently in focus is, there may be a need to zoom in
or out in order to look at the conditions and consequences at the upper or lower
level(s). Capacity building should be seen as a comprehensive methodology aimed
at providing a sustainable outcome through assessing and addressing a whole
range of relevant issues and their interrelationships.
Where a donor project is established to create land administration
infrastructures in developing or transition countries, it is critical that the
aspect of land use control is included with a holistic approach without
separating the urban and rural land use problems. It is also crucial that the
issue of capacity building is included as a mainstream component that is
addressed up front, not as an add-on. In fact, such projects should be dealt
with as capacity building projects in themselves. While attention should still
be given to the project, the key focus should be on building the capacity to
meet medium and long-term needs for dealing with the problems of land
administration and development including the urban-rural interrelations.
A good overall approach is to look at the four steps that constitute good
strategic management: where are we now; where do we want to be; how do we get
there; and how do we stay there. This approach is in line with the broad
capacity building concept which aims to assess, develop and sustain.
Experience shows that there is a need to:
- Establish a strategic approach to donor projects and ensure that capacity
building measures are addressed up front – not as an add-on.
- Develop in-country self assessment procedures to identify the capacity
needs with regard to urban-rural interrelations, and argue for the necessary
measures of capacity development in terms of policies, legal framework,
institutional infrastructures, and human resources and skills.
- Promote the creation and adoption of a comprehensive policy on land
development and establish a holistic approach to land management that combines
‘town and country planning’ and ‘policies creation and definition’ into one
professional area.
- Advocate the need for a decentralised approach to spatial planning that
recognises the local needs. The argument is that whatever outcome may emerge
from a decentralised system of decision-making it must be assumed to be the
right decision in relation to local needs. The purpose of a decentralised
approach should be to solve the tasks at the lowest possible level so as to
combine responsibility for decision making with accountability for financial
and environmental consequences.
- Establish a clear split of duties and responsibilities between national
and local government (decentralisation). Ensure that the principles of good
governance apply when dealing with rights, regulations and responsibilities
with regard to land resources and land development.
- Promote the understanding of land management as highly interdisciplinary
that includes a whole range of policy measures such as social, economic,
environmental, judicial, and organisational.
- Promote the need for an interdisciplinary approach to ‘surveying
education’ that combines both technical and social science and links the areas
of measurement science and land management through a strong emphasis on
spatial information management.
- Establish strong professional bodies such as a national institution of
surveyors who are responsible for the development and control of professional
standards and ethics, enhancement of professional competence, and interaction
with governmental agencies to develop the optimal conditions and services.
- Promote the need for continuing professional development (CPD) to maintain
and develop professional skills and promote the interaction between education,
research and professional practice.
The way forward includes the three steps: assessment, development, and
sustainability.
Assessment
A structured analysis should include questions such as:
- Are the policies on land development clearly expressed?
- Which instruments are in place to regulate human land activities and
especially the urban-rural interrelationships?
- Is the legal framework sufficient and adequate?
- Is the organisational set-up adequate with clearly defined duties and
responsibilities? Are the institutions adequate for managing the urban-rural
interrelationships?
- Are the guiding principles for good management well expressed at all
governmental levels?
- Are the human resources and skills adequate, and is there a policy
determining the amount of staff and their required competences?
- Are the relevant education and training opportunities available?
Development
Measures of capacity development should be applied to address the gaps
identified through the analysis of the capacity needs. Such measures might
include:
- Adoption of a comprehensive land policy addressing the issue of the
urban-rural divide.
- Create appropriate opportunities for dialogue between representatives and
institutions of both urban and rural areas, for example, forums, round tables
or joint workshops.
- Design of a legal framework relevant for addressing the urban-rural
interrelations.
- Implementation of a suitable organisational framework with clearly
expressed duties and responsibilities in spatial planning and especially the
urban-rural interrelationships.
- Adoption of clear guiding principles for good governance.
- Adoption of policies determining the amount of staff and their required
expertise.
- Establishment of adequate and sufficient educational options at all
levels.
Sustainability
For a process as challenging as the development of strategies for capacity
development, constant monitoring is necessary. Such measures should include:
- Instigation of a self-monitoring culture in which all parties, national
and local government, NGOs, professionals and citizens, review and discuss
progress and suggest any appropriate changes.
- Lessons learnt need to be fed back into the process for continuous
improvement.
The world can only be grasped by action, not by
contemplation.
Jacob Bronowski
Marrakech Declaration on improving Urban-Rural Interrelationship
The international Federation of Surveyors (FIG) and the partners of the
Marrakech Declaration recognise the urban-rural divide in different areas of the
world and believes that a commitment to address this issue is essential for
acceptable human living conditions throughout the world. The urban-rural
interrelationship for sustainable developments is a central theme of the
world-wide idea of good urban-rural governance.
The declaration recommends the development of a comprehensive national land
policy which includes:
- Institutional and governmental actions required for providing good
governance.
- Land administration infrastructures for control of land tenure, land value
and land use.
- Tools for capacity assessment and development at societal, organisational
and individual level.
NGOs such as the FIG have a three-fold role in connection with the
theme of urban-rural
linkages for sustainable development in cooperation with our global, national
and local
partners:
- These organisations and their member associations and individual members
can be enablers, that is, they can act as community developers, organisers or
consultants alongside community based organisations (CBOs).
- They can be mediators between people and the authorities that control
access to resources, goods and services.
- They can be advisers to governmental institutions on policy changes to
increase local access to resources and to provide greater freedom to use them
in locally-determined ways that includes urban-rural linkages.
Magel, H. (2003): Urban-Rural Interrelationship for Sustainable Development.
Keynote Speech. 2nd FIG Regional Conference, Marrakech, Morocco, 9 p.
http://www.fig.net/council/magel-papers/magel_marrakech_2003_opening.pdf
Magel, H. (2004): Breathing the Olympic Spirit – The Mission of FIG in the
21st Century. Opening speech at the FIG Working Week 2004 in Athens, Greece, 23
May 2004. 7 p.
http://www.fig.net/pub/athens/papers/opening/magel_athens_2004.pdf
Marrakech Conference Proceedings (2003): Papers and presentations are
available at
http://www.fig.net/pub/morocco/
Okpala, D. (2003): Promoting the Positive Rural-Urban Linkages Approach to
Sustainable Development and Employment Creation: The Role of UN-HABITAT Keynote
Presentation at the 2nd FIG Regional Conference, Marrakech, Morocco. 5 p.
http://www.fig.net/pub/morocco/proceedings/PS1/PS1_1_okpala.pdf
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April 2001.
UNDP (1998): Capacity Assessment and Development. Technical Advisory Paper
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http://magnet.undp.org/Docs/cap/CAPTECH3.htm
UN-ECE (1996): Land Administration Guidelines. New York/Geneva. ISBN
92-1-116644-6. (A new edition is in print.)
UN-ECE (1998) Social and Economic Benefits of Good Land Administration. New
York and Geneva.
http://www.unece.org/env/hs/wpla/welcome.html
UN/FIG (2002): The Nairobi Statement on Spatial Information for Sustainable
Development. FIG Publication Series, No 30. ISBN 87-90907-19-1.
http://www.fig.net/pub/figpub/pub30/figpub30.htm
UN/FIG (1999): The Bathurst Declaration on Land Administration for
Sustainable Development. FIG Publication Series, No 21. ISBN 87-90907-01-9.
http://www.fig.net/pub/figpub/pub21/figpub21.htm
UN-HABITAT/FIG (2002): Land Information Management for Sustainable
Development of Cities. FIG Publication Series, No 31. ISBN 87-90907-21-3.
http://www.fig.net/pub/figpub/pub31/figpub31.htm
UN-HABITAT (1999): Informal Settlement Upgrading: The demand for Capacity
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to Land. Nairobi. ISBN 92-1-131446-1.
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Berlin 4–6 July 2000.
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