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CREATING FAMILY-FRIENDLY CITIES
PCDForum Column #72, Release Date April 20, 1994.
by Clarence Shubert
Almost everywhere in the world, traditional family structures are disintegrating in the face of rapid urbanization. The pattern of a limited and fragmented home life is having a devastating effect on family and community systems. High rates of divorce, child abuse and neglect, teenage pregnancy, violence, alcoholism, drug abuse, crime, and suicide are evident consequences.
In order to afford shelter, higher education for children and adequate health care, both parents are forced to work outside the home. The family's primary functions of education, recreation, child care, entertainment, and food production, preparation and consumption are left to the market and public bureaucracies, creating a need for even more income to pay for basic necessities and higher taxes. Children are sequentially cared for, if at all, by nurseries, day-care centers and schools. Impoverished, single parent, female headed households are becoming the norm.
Parents become providers and night guardians with little time, energy or encouragement to do more than function as bread winners in the market. The modern urban home becomes little more than a place to sleep and watch television its most important characteristic its location in relation to work, school, shops and other amenities. It is a stark contrast to the days of extended families and the mutual support they traditionally provided.
The usual response to this breakdown is a call for more centralized, publicly funded social services and police security, essentially to fill the gap left by disintegrating family and community structures. There is another, less obvious answer, however. Create cities that restore the functions of family and community, while reducing family dependence on income from jobs that take parents ever further from home for ever longer periods.
Obviously, the burdens of caring for children, the elderly and disabled cannot entirely be shifted back to individual families. Neither can women be expected to bear the full burden. Yet in many countries a strong and cohesive family is seen as the natural and most desirable institution to care for children, the disabled and the elderly. Families in turn need the support of strong and cohesive communities. Such a perspective leads to a more holistic approach to dealing with the accelerating social and environmental crises of cities struggling to meet growing demands on already failing environmental, waste disposal, transportation, energy, social service and water systems.
Increasing population densities are pressing the expansion of urbanization and its attendant problems ever further into rural areas. What we now need is a corresponding "ruralization" of urban areas, a new vision of cities organized into networks of urban villages.
In this vision, each urban village would recycle its sewage, solid waste and even air through fish ponds, gardens and green areas to sustainably produce much of the food, clean water, fresh air and recreational spaces it requires. Urban agriculture, aquaculture and the intensive recycling of wastes would provide new sustainable livelihood opportunities, while renewing family and community ties, allowing for greater sharing of family responsibilities among men and women, and decentralizing urban management.
Working out of the home would once again become common, with traditional cottage industries existing side-by-side with agricultural and waste recycling activities, and the electronic cottage industries of the high technology age. Family support services such as community-based daycare, family counseling, schools, family health services, and multi-purpose community centers particularly to serve youth, the elderly and children would be common, making these integral community functions and sources of employment nearer to home.
There would continue to be a division of work and a diversity of lifestyles. However, all households would become more involved in primary environmental care. Recycling of household wastes would require separation within the home. Community management and leadership would become more important as the urban village takes on many of the functions now performed by central municipal governments. Civic education and communal responsibilities would also become more important. Many households would combine salaried employment with subsistence food production, waste recycling, and voluntary community service leading to a return to the multifunctional home.
The vision of the family-friendly city, with the home and its immediate neighborhood once again the center of life, already exists in some pockets or suburbs of many cities in Asia. Government policies need to proactively support smaller neighborhood schools and health facilities, and recreation areas and green spaces that also serve to recycle waste and produce fresh air, clean water and food. Organizing cities around urban villages will require changes in the nature of housing, services, and transportation. It will also require a significant reorientation of municipal services systems to encourage and facilitate greater commitment and involvement of people in management and voluntary work within their communities.
Clarence Shubert is Senior Advisor, Urban Management Programme, Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, United Nations Centre for Human Settlements, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. This column was prepared and disseminated by the People-Centered Development Forum based on his article in Urban Voices No. 2, February 1994.
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- 1993
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- 1995
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- A NOT SO RADICAL AGENDA FOR A SUSTAINABLE GLOBAL FUTURE
- PROPERTY RIGHTS VERSUS LIVING RIGHTS: DEFINING ISSUES FOR HABITAT II
- 1996
- WINNING IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY: CHILE'S DARK VICTORY
- ECONOMICS WITHOUT ETHICS: THE CRISIS OF SPIRITUALITY
- FOOD SECURITY FOR PEOPLE
- UNDERSTANDING MONEY
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- Profile of MARILYN MEHLMANN
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- 1997
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- Why the Fuss About Stockholders?
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