CALL FOR PAPERS for our FIFTH ANNUAL REDUCING URBAN POVERTY
2014 Graduate Student Paper Competition, Policy Workshop and Publication
Abstracts due: April 30, 2014
To encourage a new generation of urban policy makers and promote early career research, USAID,
International Housing Coalition (IHC), World Bank, the Wilson Center, and Cities Alliance are co-sponsoring a
fifth annual paper competition, seeking abstracts on urban poverty in the developing world. Winning papers
will be published and selected authors will present their work in a policy workshop to be held at the Wilson
Center in Washington, D.C. in January, 2015. The grand prize winner will receive a travel stipend to present
the paper at a Cities Alliance Forum in Brussels.
Papers must be linked to one of the following sub-topics:
Cities and Climate Change
Cities are where the battle for climate change will be fought and won. Urban areas account for 70-80% of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, yet on a per capita basis many cities emit less GHG than their rural and suburban counterparts. Cities, especially in coastal areas, are being forced to adapt to the realities of climate change. Cities are also on the cutting edge of innovations in energy efficiency and GHG mitigation through
interventions in sectors such as urban planning and design, transportation and storm water management. Papers on this topic should explore the ways in which cities of the developing world are adapting to, and mitigating the severity of, climate change.
Urban Resiliency
Recent urban disasters, such as the 2010 earthquake in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, or the typhoon that hit the coastal city of Tacloban in the Philippines, expose the unique challenges and opportunities of responding to natural and man-made disasters occurring near urban agglomerations. Responding to and recovering from the destruction of housing, basic services and public infrastructure is particularly challenging in urban settings, as is planning for disaster risk reduction in the future. At the same time, the density of population and infrastructure in cities makes planning for permanent reconstruction while still enabling temporary solutions for victims of disasters extremely difficult. Papers on this topic should focus on long term reconstruction planning, preparedness, early response, resiliency, and recovery, and could address issues such as shelter and housing, service delivery, infrastructure, or city planning in a post-disaster setting.
Click here for more details.
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CALL FOR PAPERS for our FIFTH ANNUAL REDUCING URBAN POVERTY
2014 Graduate Student Paper Competition, Policy Workshop and Publication
Abstracts due: April 30, 2014
To encourage a new generation of urban policy makers and promote early career research, USAID,
International Housing Coalition (IHC), World Bank, the Wilson Center, and Cities Alliance are co-sponsoring a
fifth annual paper competition, seeking abstracts on urban poverty in the developing world. Winning papers
will be published and selected authors will present their work in a policy workshop to be held at the Wilson
Center in Washington, D.C. in January, 2015. The grand prize winner will receive a travel stipend to present
the paper at a Cities Alliance Forum in Brussels.
Papers must be linked to one of the following sub-topics:
Cities and Climate Change
Cities are where the battle for climate change will be fought and won. Urban areas account for 70-80% of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, yet on a per capita basis many cities emit less GHG than their rural and suburban counterparts. Cities, especially in coastal areas, are being forced to adapt to the realities of climate change. Cities are also on the cutting edge of innovations in energy efficiency and GHG mitigation through
interventions in sectors such as urban planning and design, transportation and storm water management. Papers on this topic should explore the ways in which cities of the developing world are adapting to, and mitigating the severity of, climate change.
Urban Resiliency
Recent urban disasters, such as the 2010 earthquake in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, or the typhoon that hit the coastal city of Tacloban in the Philippines, expose the unique challenges and opportunities of responding to natural and man-made disasters occurring near urban agglomerations. Responding to and recovering from the destruction of housing, basic services and public infrastructure is particularly challenging in urban settings, as is planning for disaster risk reduction in the future. At the same time, the density of population and infrastructure in cities makes planning for permanent reconstruction while still enabling temporary solutions for victims of disasters extremely difficult. Papers on this topic should focus on long term reconstruction planning, preparedness, early response, resiliency, and recovery, and could address issues such as shelter and housing, service delivery, infrastructure, or city planning in a post-disaster setting.
Click here for more details.
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