Final Declaration World Assembly of Cities and Local Authorities (WACLA),
Istanbul, 30-31 May 1996. Our Cities Our Home: A to Z Guide on Human SettlementsIssues
Final DeclarationWorld Assembly of Cities and Local
Authorities (WACLA), Istanbul, 30-31 May 1996
We, representatives of local authorities the world over, serving the populations
or rural and urban communities; small, medium and large towns; metropolises
and regions; as participants in the World Assembly of Cities and Local
Authorities organised by the Local Authorities Habitat II Steering Committee
(G4+) and their associates within the framework of the Partners Forum of
the Second United Nations Conference on Human Settlements,
Aware of the fact that:
1. the world is being transformed, as a result of the series of far-reaching
changes which are fundamentally altering both its perception and its future
in relation to the past;
2. the world is becoming increasingly urbanised, and an urban habitat is
becoming a reality for most people, which implies the need to become familiar
everywhere with the methods of governance and management appropriate to urban
societies;
3. revolutions in modes of communication are making the world smaller, thus
intensifying the relations between nations and between people, and increasing
awareness of the interdependence of everything and everyone, not only in
the management of the environment, but also in the process of development,
social problems and security;
4. as globalisation takes place, aspirations regarding the respect of fundamental
rights, especially in relation to the governance of human settlements, are
becoming universal;
5. the world is becoming increasingly fragmented, as modernisation and the
competition associated with it often gives rise to exclusion, at the
international, national and local levels;
6. the world has to reorganise and adjust to the unprecedented challenges
facing it in all fields, which place every institution and every actor in
a learning situation in relation both to understanding and to managing a
reality which is becoming more complex by the day;
7. the world has to revise its patterns of thinking and action in order to
achieve viable, mutually supportive, healthier and safer human settlements.
For this it is necessary to devise coherent medium and long-term guiding
principles and, for their implementation, to adopt new negotiating, cooperation
and partnership procedures.
To help develop these guiding principles, and to define the process of
partnership necessary to viable, supportive, safer and healthier human
settlements,
We reaffirm that:
1. as the main arena of social interaction and exchange, the town must be
recognised as the pivotal human settlement, around which and within which
economic growth and sustainable development, the well being and social cohesion
of the majority of people, capacity of adaptation and technical, social,
cultural and political innovation, the invention of our future and the renewed
vision of the progress of humanity and the future of our civilizations, will
be determined; Such recognition does not signify a lack of understanding
of the negative features of urban life, such as the spread of physical and
moral misery, the rise in insecurity, the deterioration of the living conditions
of an ever growing number of residents, their destructive effect on the
environment and on the management of natural resources; on the contrary,
it highlights the urgency of finding effective remedies for these problems;
2. sustainable human development is the concept around which the future of
our towns and cities must be conceived and organised;
3. every effort must be made to render towns and cities more aware of the
concepts of sustainable environmental management - including the preservation
of the historic, cultural and natural heritage, more economic in the consumption
of non-renewable natural resources and land' more sensitive to air and water
pollution and more conscientious about reducing waste and recycling;
4. every effort must be made to overcome the problems of congestion and pollution
in towns caused by the growth of traffic;
5. every effort must be made to ensure that towns and cities invigorate rural
areas instead of impoverising them, which means taking more account of the
interdependence of town and country;
6. every effort must be made to ensure that towns and cities give more attention
to social integration and the struggle against exclusion, in order to avoid
weakening the social fabric and jeopardising the notion of belonging and
citizenship. This should include positive action to involve all groups and
sectors of society in the process of municipal
government, including the
preparation on budget programmes;
7. accordingly, sustainable human development must be conceived and enacted
essentially at the local level, which is best able to mobilise concrete
initiatives from the bottom up, geared towards a better individual and collective
quality of life, whilst still respecting the proper role of the State in
economic and social matters;
8. policies of decentralisation must become the favored approach in the promotion
of sustainable human development and the good governance of human settlements
in recognition that a human settlement - of a given level is better managed
where decisions affecting it are taken at its own level, (according to the
principle of autonomy); and better governed where the authorities managing
the accessible, (according to the principle of proximity), and are selected
on a democratic basis;
9. policies of decentralisation must acknowledge that the local authorities
have a strategic role in order to encourage the expression and mobilisation
of local energies, help people to take responsibility for their own affairs,
and establish the physical and institutional framework necessary to local
development, in conjunction with the State and other actors
10. to be able to play their role completely in this respect, local authorities
must legally constituted, with adequate powers, must be able fully and without
hindrance to undertake the responsibilities which are recognised as their
own, and must be able to call upon the necessary financial and human resources
and management and training capacity to fulfill their responsibilities;
11. all human settlements are increasingly interdependent, with ever growing
flows of trade and other exchanges between them. The intensity of these relations
creates the need for the local authorities at all levels to establish stable
and sustainable means of financial, social, technical and cultural cooperation
between human settlements. This need was strongly confirmed at the Dubai
Conference of Best Practices and in its Declaration.
On the basis of these guiding principles, and in view of our shared objective
of making our regions, metropolises, towns and villages supportive, viable,
healthy and safe human settlements,
We, the delegates to the World Assembly of Cities and Local Authorities,
commit ourselves:
1. to take an active role in responding to the challenges facing humanity;
to fight strongly at our level against poverty, ignorance, discrimination,
exclusion, insecurity, environmental degradation, and cultural leveling;
and to promote and strengthen our action for the rights and well-being of
children, which should be seen as the ultimate indicator of a healthy society
and good governance;
2. to promote within our regions, metropolises, towns and villages participatory
development policies rooted in an active partnership with all vital local
forces (community-based organisations, neighborhood or village associations,
non-governmental organisations, the private sector, professional groupings,
trade unions, etc.);
3. to devise methods of administration adapted to the complexity and specificity
of the local level, as well as appropriate modes of financing and management
of human settlements, including regional planning measures;
4. to improve the transparency and efficiency of the management of our regions,
metropolises, towns and villages, with the primary aim of providing people
with services to meet their needs, and thereby to encourage the development
of a sense of civil engagement;
5. to accord every opportunity for full access and participation by women
in municipal decision-making by making the necessary provisions for an equitable
distribution of power and authority;
6. to strengthen direct cooperation between out local authorities, with the
support of the national, regional and international associations of local
authorities, in order to encourage meetings between peoples, exchanges of
experience and the development of partnerships between local actors. Such
cooperation will also help us to build a local vision of the challenges of
the future and to draw up the appropriate strategies of action, in a constructive
dialogue with the State, the international community, the private sector,
non-governmental organisations and the other partners of civil society;
7. to draw full advantage from the transformation potential of new technological
developments in setting up better targeted forms of decentralised cooperation
by means of technical assistance, transfers of technology and know-how, and
collaboration between practitioners;
8. to develop a constructive dialogue with the States, the international
community and all partners about activities and practices at the local level,
especially by disseminating information and by producing specific local
indicators to facilitate decision-making;
9. to work towards concerting our respective activities more closely, in
particularly through the global coordination of cities and local authorities
established at this Assembly. This coordination will be our voice vis-à-vis
the international community, with which it will in particular negotiate the
ways and means of implementing at local level the global plan of action in
the Habitat Agenda;
10. to play our full part in achieving the fulfillment of the United Nations
resolutions calling for at least 0.7% of the GNP of the developed countries
to be allocated to cooperation programmes with the developing countries;
11. to implement the recommendations of the Conference within our realm or
responsibility through involvement in the national committees for HABITAT
II, and evaluate their impact with regard to our respective local authorities;
12. to collaborate with UNESCO in the institution of an international Mayors'
Prize for Peace to be awarded to outstanding initiatives taken by local
authorities in the implementation of a culture of peace in everyday living.
We ask the private sector:
1. to work towards establishing an outgoing coordination to serve as the
interlocutor and institutional partner of the UN and its specialised Agencies;
2. to direct the Group G4+ to constitute forthwith the standing coordination
of the movement of cities and local authorities, endowed with a rotating
presidency, having the authority to represent their community and acting
by delegation of a Council of Presidents, and served by a secretariat of
its own, financed by its constituent organisations;
3. to ensure that the coordination thus created as soon as possible assume
terms of reference that would enable it to evolve into some form of official
structure linking all the international associations of cities and local
authorities, recognised institutionally by the UN;
4. to set up in the framework of this coordination a technical committee
to explore ways and means of establishing and International Fund for Human
Development.
We ask the States:
1. to recognise the driving role of cities and local authorities in sustainable
development, and to implement policies geared towards mobilising more resources
for urban development, whilst recognising the needs of rural areas;
2. consequently, to initiate appropriate measures to improve the supply of
building land and housing, security of tenure, and the smooth operation of
land and housing markets, and to encourage investments by the public and
private sectors in urban infrastructure and services;
3. to keep in place the national committees established on a partnership
basis for the preparation of HABITAT II, so as to assure the conditions for
a constructive dialogue at national level;
4. to take up, follow through and intensify policies of decentralisation
and to ensure that the principle of subsidiary guides the allocation of
responsibilities and resources to the different levels of government with
regard to the management of human settlements;
5. to put in place the institutional and legal framework for the exercise
of local democracy, in order to assure truly democratic representation at
the local level;
6. to grant consultation and legal autonomy to local authorities in relation
to their fundamental role of managing human settlements and for their
contribution to the preservation of civil peace and the organisation of
sustainable local development, within relevant national legal framework;
7. to support and encourage the national associations of local authorities
in their work of organising and strengthening capacities at local levels,
and to undertake to consult them on all matters affecting the responsibilities
and functions of local authorities;
8. to acknowledge and facilitate municipal and other forms of decentralised
international cooperation as relevant forms of cooperation which complement
bilateral; and multilateral cooperation and are open to linkages with them;
9. to assure an equitable distribution of resources to local authorities,
in proportion to their needs, to help them in their battle against poverty,
unemployment and exclusion, and to give them the means to ensure decent living
conditions for their populations.
We ask the international community that:
1. sustainable human development be placed high on the list of programme
priorities of the multilateral agencies, in a coordinated and complementary
manner, together with the mobilisation of appropriate resources;
2. the best efforts of the national governments and the international
institutions be deployed to encourage those countries which do not yet have
democratically elected local authorities to introduce, as soon as possible,
the necessary constitutional or legal provisions to enable their citizens
freely to elect their local representatives without further delay;
3. steps to be taken to draw up, in partnership with the representative
associations of local authorities, a worldwide Charter of local
self-government setting out, for the guidance of all national governments
and international agencies, the basic principles which should underlie any
democratic local government system. The basis of this Charter should reside
in the principle of subsidiary or proximity whereby decisions should be taken
at the level closest to the citizens, (municipality or town), and only that
which the local level cannot effectively carry out alone should be referred
to the higher levels;
4. the Habitat Agenda and its global plan of action provide explicity for
linkages and interfaces with the national plans and local Agendas, taking
specific regional conditions and priorities into consideration. The definition
and organisation of these interfaces should make account of the accumulated
experience of local authorities
in implementing Local Agenda 21 programmes in pursuance of the global Agenda
21 adopted by the Rio de Janeiro Conference on Environment and Development;
5. worldwide effort made in collaboration with national, regional and
international associations of local authorities, to provide support for existing
training programmes and to set up new training programmes adapted to the
realities of each region, which aim at preparing local leaders and officials
for the efficientand sustainable management of human settlements;
6. the place of direct cooperation between towns and local authorities be
fully recognised in the field of international cooperation, that it be integrated
into bilateral and multilateral programmes of cooperation and development
assistance, and that substantial resources be made available for its development;
7. the composition of the Commission on Human Settlements be opened to
representatives of cities and local authorities duly nominated by their
international associations, so as to assure the conditions for a constructive
dialogue at the international level;
8. national, regional and international associations of local authorities
be systematically involved as key partners in the mechanism for collecting,
storing and disseminating information about towns and local authorities and
their activities, in partnership with the Indicators Programme and Best Practices
Initiative. However, such data collection should not be carried out in ways
that are detrimental to practical cooperation between cities and local
authorities;
9. the ongoing coordination called for by this World Assembly should be
recognised and consideration as the sole interlocutor on behalf of the cities
and local authorities to negotiate : policies concerning urban development
and management of human settlements within the framework of global sustainable
development; and the formulation, definition and implementation of cooperation
programmes and development assistance;
10. they explore with it ways and means of improving the effectiveness of
cooperation and development assistance and increasing the resources allocated
to urban development and municipal management.
Istanbul, 31 May 1996
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