Stakeholder-rated methods

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Stakeholder-related methods

Stakeholder-rated methods are required to make well-considered decisions regarding cultural, ethics and legal aspects of security issues in urban development processes.

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List of requirements from VITRUV-related work

List of requirements from related projects and so far VITRUV work (in particular D1.1):

  • identify and involve all relevant actors in the process of urban planning, including active citizen participation;
  • consider the non-linearity based on the fact that in urban systems all phases of the common crisis management cycle may be experienced simultaneously in different parts of the city;
  • reflect that resilience in cities should be grounded in a holistic view of sustainability;
  • appreciate individual perceptions of security (e.g. on the level of regional or national patterns);
  • identify areas of concern and address them specifically, without extrapolating to the planning of the city as a whole;
  • combine urban planning with raising of citizens' awareness;
  • contribute to identifying individual as well as group-specific vulnerabilities and increasing resilience;
  • based on the acknowledgement that public urban space is about living and evolving, not about being watched and observed, a planning tool must always allow ample space for later changes and adaptations;
  • combine material aspects with social aspects of culture, processes built upon by the community safety approach that sees a general shift in political and public conceptions of security from situational prevention to safety of a community as a whole;
  • contribute to adequate foresight and scenario modeling, taking into account citizens´ acceptance and acceptability of alternative futures.


These requirements have only started to be addressed as part of relevant national and European projects, such as:

  • DynASS – Dynamic Arrangements of urban security culture

http://www.dynass-projekt.de/sicherheit-stadt/

  • Meet the Need – How physical and social phenomena can cause insecurity – and urban planning can do to tackle them

http://www.queraum.org/pdfs/Info_MtN.pdf

  • PluS – Planning urban Security

http://www.plus-eu.com/index.php?c=start&u=&l=en

  • DESURBS – DESigning of safer URBan Spaces

http://www.bezalel.ac.il/en/about/research/desurbs/

  • Chance2Sustain – Urban Chances - City Growth and the Sustainability Challenge

http://www.chance2sustain.eu/4.0.html

Stakeholder validation study

A stakeholder validation study on security-related urban planning “missions” is in progress. Approach and results to be reported here are reflected in the below “raw” table that summarizes information on methods from this Wiki:

Security-related urban planning missions Example/illustration Tool/method to meet the challenge
Enhance women's security [1] Situation analysis for planning safe cities, e.g. “What times of day or night do women and girls go out most often? What times of day or night do women and girls go out least often? Why?”; Which groups of women in the city or community most often experience violence or insecurity? Safety audit, e.g. womens’ safety audit by the Metropolitan Action Committee on Violence Against Women and Children (http://www.metrac.org/programs/safe/audits.htm), based on diverse audit group members so to reflect a broad spectrum of safety concerns. A example for a safety audit checklist is available on http://www.redmujer.com.ar/pdf_publicaciones/safety_audits_checklist.pdf
Consider citizens' subjective perception of criticality of (urban) infrastructure [2] We know from risk research that certain artefacts as present in urban areas can distract citizens' perception of risk from the more "objective" level of risk. For example, citizens tend to perceive "monumental" infrastructure as more critical than less conspicuous infrastructure, sometimes irrespective of the known function of that infrastructure. List of indicators derived from risk research to determine relevant kinds of infrastructure and properly address the issue of perceived criticality in urban planning.
Prevent emotional and radical reactions to "privatized" public spaces[3] Garland’s (2001: 162) cultural criminology. He illustrates his argument with examples from urban planning, especially the concept of offering citizens new middle-class type privacy in private public spaces, such a commercial malls based on architectures “to separate out different ‘types’ of people” and including commercial policing by private companies. Advocacy Planning, Participatory Diagnosis, Local Dialogue or Dynamic Facilitation are important methods to identify different interests and ‘types’ of people in using public spaces.
Reduce gaps between felt and factual security[4] “[T]he perception of insecurity in cities depends largely upon the substantial amount and constant flow of information that urban residents receive from many sources.” (United Nations Human Settlements Programme 2007). Multicultural crisis communication to identify “weak points” in urban environments, e.g. involving use of new social media in citizen-to-government/public administration and government/public administration-to-citizen communication
Zone certain functional areas in the city without creating unequal levels of security in different areas[5] Tenet of the school of "new urbanism": Overcome the zoning of functional areas, separating residential from economy and other use. Aim at a mix of residential and economy-related functions. Conceptually, foster the integration of society into urbanity. The zoning of certain functional areas in the city relies on active citizen participation – like Opinion Surveys, Planning for Real, Local Dialogue or Round Tables – in the construction and development of urban neighbourhoods.
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Footnotes and references

  1. http://www.endvawnow.org/en/articles/262-ask-questions-about-womens-safety-in-the-city.html; WISE 2005
  2. KIRAS project SFI@SFU work
  3. David Garland (2001)
  4. United Nations Human Settlements Programme (2007), esp. ch. 3.
  5. Peter Calthorpe & Fulton William (2001)