Presentation by Vincent Kitio www.bestpractices.org
Best Practices’ Concept Have a demonstrable and tangible impact on improving people’s quality of life; Result from effective partnerships between public, private and civic sectors of society; Are socially, culturally, economically and environmentally sustainable.
Genesis of Best Practices The original call for Best Practices was launched in 1996 during Habitat II conference in Istanbul The international community defined what constitutes a best practice and adopted guidelines for their documentation and dissemination. The Habitat Agenda mandates that best practices be used to monitor and assess progress in achieving sustainable urbanization. The Best Practices and Local Leadership Programme (BLP) was established as a global network of public, private and civil society organizations
Policy Relevance Best Practices are promoted by UN-HABITAT as a means of: Improving public policy based on what works; Raising awareness of decision-makers at all levels & of the general public of potential solutions to social, economic and environmental problems; Assessing emerging issues, trends and policy responses; Sharing & transferring expertise & experience through networking & peer-to-peer learning city to city collaboration.
Identification of Best Practices Identification is achieved through three principle means: Targeted search by a global network of institutions; Calls for best practices using the incentive of the biennial Dubai Award for Best Practices & collaboration with other award and recognition systems; Ongoing research, operational activities and development project & program.
Documentation of Best Practices Best Practices are documented by people, communities & organizations who are directly involved in their implementation. Documentation process is intended as a capacity building exercise as well as an exercise in self-appraisal. Standardized reporting format for the documentation process has evolved over time due to lessons learned & in response to emerging issues and trends.
Documentation of Best Practices The use of a common set of criteria and a standardized reporting format is useful in identifying and analyzing lessons learned on: How people & communities perceive their problems & what empowers them to undertake or initiate change; What obstacles people & their communities face & approaches effective in overcoming them; What are the: roles, responsibilities & contributions of different social actors & partners; Contributing factors in sustaining an initiative; Promising policy options, effective institutional frameworks & governance systems.
Assessment of Best Practices The evaluation of BP involves a three-step process: validation; technical assessment; and normative assessment. Validation Involves the global network of partners, ad hoc organizations, & individuals representing relevant geographic and/or thematic expertise and experience. The aim is to verify that information submitted is an accurate reflection of reality. The process is carried out through e-mail.
Assessment of Best Practices Technical appraisal: Undertaken by independent technical advisory committee consisting of 15 experts with equal geographical distribution and gender balance. The committee meets physically & its mandate is to differentiate between “best”, “good”, “promising” and “not qualifier”. For each practice the following perspectives are considered: - three basic criteria: impact; partnerships and sustainability
- additional criteria: leadership & community empowerment; innovation within the local context; gender equality and social inclusion; and transferability;
- Absolute merit within a national and/or local context;
- Relative merit in comparison to other practices from same region or in same thematic area.
Assessment of Best Practices Best Practices Jury Short-listed practices are forwarded to an Independent Jury made of seniors professional and formal ministers, policy makers, etc. The Jury uses similar approach in deciding on award-winning practices. An international press-conference is organized to announce the award-winners. The short-listed practices are used extensively for research and analysis.
Knowledge Management Framework
Environmental Sustainability Fossato di Vico, Umbria, Italy Context: Population of 2500 people situated in the region of the Umbria, Italy; High level of migration in the 1950s and '60s to USA; Underdeveloped town with poor economic and social state development; Progressive ageing of the population; High unemployment (prevalently female) and lack of opportunities for youth; Violent earthquake in 1997 and the town suffered damages to building and property; 60% in total, of which 12% were totally unusable.
Environmental Sustainability
Environmental Sustainability
Political Sustainability Porto Alegre, Brazil Context: Pervasive slums and social exclusion High levels of urban poverty and unemployment Corrupt and unresponsive local government
Political Sustainability
Political Sustainability
Lessons Learned Process: Process as important as outcome; Process is transferable, not the solution;
Lessons Learned Need to combine: Physical improvements and tangible economic benefits; Awareness building and effective mechanisms for participation; Partnerships and improved governance; Decentralisation and capacity-building.
Lessons Learned Need to focus more on up-scaling and transfer of BPs Need to combine BPs with good policies & legislation Need to promote the creation of national/regional best practices knowledge management system; Need to strengthen and mainstream national/regional BPKM systems as a policy tool.
Pointers for the future
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |