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The 21st Century Urban City Planning

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The main factors governing Urban planning are: Climate Change,Resource Depletion,Food Insecurity and Economic Instability. If cities have to be sustainable for the future these issues have to be addressed immediately. An argument was put forward in the meetings of UN Habitat world forum and the World planners congress in Vancouver, 2006 that the profession of Urban planning has to be reviewed under the light of policies which are pro-poor and create sustainable livelihoods at the center of planning efforts.
 

Influential Forms of Urban Planning of the 20th Century 
 
1. Neighborhood Unit - Low population density,full of open spaces, focused on community facilities, and assumed to create viable social communities.
 
2.Radburn Layout - Separates motorized traffic from pedestrians, characterized by open spaces and super blocks free of traffic.
 
3. Urban Renewal - Slum clearance and rehousing projects following Radburn and neighborhood layouts.
 
4. Road Hierarchy - creates a hierarchy of roads to take care of the urban traffic and its management. The lowest level of the hierarchy is the Environmental Cell, which takes care of local traffic. At the higher levels are the district and long distance traffic grids.
 
5. Suburbia - Assumes very high level of car ownership and large densities of population around structured areas of growth in a city. The residential complexes are development at the Urban periphery, are single family units and consists of large areas of Car movement systems and community facility networks.
 
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The challenges confronting the cities of 21st Century

 
Environmental Concern - 
1.The economics of climate change include access to basic elements of life such as Drinking water,Food production, and health and sanitation requirements.
 
2. Current economies are Oil based. Hence emission control is a major concern in both developing and developed economies.
 
Economic Concern -
 
1. The economic restructuring in current decades have lead to addition of gender dimension to the existing working culture. Women are disproportionately concentrated in the informal economies,particularly trades which involve low paid activities.
 
2. As the world economies have become integrated, rapid effects of recessions are predominant across all the countries of the Globe. Unemployment is a rapid phenomenon in almost all the countries of the world whenever the cycles of economics turn towards the recessionary position.
Urban Population Expansion -
 
1. From 2007 to 2025, the annual rate of change of urban population is expected to be 2.27% (developing regions) and 0.49% (developed regions), as per a report by UN Habitat,year 2008. The result of such a phenomenon is that while some of the cities in the West are experiencing 'Shrinkage', others in the East are becoming 'Mega-cities' of the future. This causes problems in terms of infrastructure management and local governance.
 
2. According to the Human development report 2009 by UN Habitat, close to 37% of the Urban population live in slums in inequitable and life threatening conditions. This issue of Urbanization of poverty is becoming a rapid phenomenon in developing countries experiencing rapid rate of growth in urban population.
 
Thus such concerns have refocused attention on Urban planning. The findings that approximately 17% of the cities in the developing world are experiencing an annual growth rate of around 4% or more, have lead to the growing concern of accommodating such population in the cities of the future. As, in many parts of the world old and conventional  methods of Urban planning still exist, new methods of sustainable urban planning need to focus on Pro- poor dwelling developments,Improved resource utilization and better access to the local economies to reduce unemployment.
 
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New Approaches of Urban Planning 
 
1. Strategic Spatial Planning - It focuses on those aspects of a city that are important to the overall objectives of the Urban plan. The Spatial planning consists of directives and frameworks of conceptual urban plan rather than actual detailed plan. The important aspects of the Spatial plan have to be integrated with the regulatory aspects of Governing local policies.
 
2. New Approaches to Land Regularization and Management - The informal sector of cities are an issue of concern in New age Urban planning. These approaches focus on Positive Business aspects of such a sector and plans the urban dwelling accordingly.
 
3. New Forms of Master Plan - These plans are Bottom up, Participatory, Social Justice Oriented and aim to counter the effects of Land speculations. One important aspect is the Special Zones of Land access. This aims to control the dynamics of real estate market, provide secure housing to all and protect against down raiding the poor.
 
4. Compact City and New Urbanism - This approach adheres to spatial principles but at the local levels. This promotes cities with a fine grained mix of housing types,attractive public realms, pedestrian friendly street-scapes and public transportation access at ease.
 
 
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To conclude, most of the new developments in Urban Planning aim to integrate with the governance processes. The regulatory frameworks need to have socially inclusive policies. The planning system should have the ability to adapt to the impending problems of environmental concerns and economic issues. Moreover, such activities have to be closely aligned with progressive National policies to promote long term sustainability of such Urban landscapes. 
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3 Ways to Improve Social Enterprises

India is a country of Sharp contrasts.On one hand one of its richest state Gujarat boasts about its economic turn around,but on the other hand a UN health report reveals that large number of Gujarati women are malnourished. Likewise India is rated as the biggest source of Billionaires in S.E.Asia, by Forbes,yet  around 40% of the total Indian population livebelow poverty lineWhat lacks is a proper framework of development that includes social alleviation policies and social innovations.
 
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Image- Poverty
Social Enterprise is not new. Vinoba Bhave, the founder of India’s Land Gift Movement, Robert Owen, the founder of cooperative movement and Florence Nightingale, founder of first nursing school and developer of modern nursing practices are few examples of Social entrepreneurship. The issues that social enterprises deal with are social justice, inequality and inclusion,  environment, trade justice and development.
 
Short-Comings of Existing Framework
In the twentieth century Social Enterprise has embraced charities and community organisations.
1.The way social enterprises operate now is often to address the  limitationsof public service provision. Some social enterprises, based on charities, are established to meet needs. 
 
2.The state Governments find it difficult to cope with diversity of needs of users, 
especially niche and specialist needs as consumers have become increasingly aware of their distinct needs and able to voice their demands. Social enterprises are often developed just to cater for needs which the state does not fully meet.
 
3.The state Governments create a culture of paternalism, encouraging a dependency culture.Here Social enterprises  come to see themselves as recipients of solutions delivered to them by professionals rather than participants in creating solutions. 
 

However, Social enterprises should have their own Business values built on a model of self-help that encourages people to be participants in creating solutions for one another. They should mobilise peer-to-peer systems of support, for example, rather than relying on 
professionals. Thus,Government needs a framework for social innovation that improves social outcomes.

 
Strategies to Improve the Framework
 
1. Larger Scale = Greater Impact  
In-order to strengthen the existing Social Enterprises,these businesses should Champion the Economics of Scale.Enterprises should operate at a National level and a become household name.Organizations must find ways of clustering together, helping themselves to form alliances, federations and networks that give them scale. The Grameen Bank has achieved this, first in Bangladesh and then around the world. Grameen is impressive because it operates at scale.
 
2.Social Innovation Platforms = Social Enterprise State

The government should create Social Innovation platforms at Public Level. This will bring together the public sector, private companies and social enterprises to address shared problems and opportunities, such as provision of home- based services for the elderly, to combat social isolation. A shift towards more local governance such as local carbon trusts to drive down CO2 emissions– would create the conditions for much more local social innovation.

3. More Socially Responsible Businesses = More Disruptive Innovation
Developing Goods and Providing services at radically low costs, so as to bring them in reach of poor consumers.
->The Clinton Global Initiative has done something like this with Aids drugs for the poor, by finding a way to eliminate middle men and distributors so as to get the generic versions of drugs more cheaply. 
->Fair-trade producers such as Café Direct have shown how corporate supply chains can be reorganised to provide commodity producers in the developing world with a higher margin. 

 
Conclusion
Thus,Social enterprises can challenge mainstream businesses to operate in more socially responsible ways. Also, they can inspire consumers to demand such products.
 

Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft, had once said that If you believe that each life has equal value then it is disgusting to learn than some lives are worth saving and some not…We asked “How could the world let these children die?
Bill and Melinda Gates foundation since then has worked  to find approaches that caters to the needs of the poor,and that generates profits for business. 
Some of the recent examples of successful social ventures are -  The Grameen Bank by Muhammad Yunus, Ashoka: The Innovators for the Public by Bill Drayton, Youth United by Jyotindra Nath, Rand De by Ramakrishna and Smita Ram, SKS Microfinance by Vikram Akula and Roozi.com by Nick Reder, Brent Freeman and Norma La Rosa has popularized the term. 
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