Furthering the urban agenda in developing countries: guidelines for preparing national ‘State of Cities’ reports
Tipple, G., Smit, W., & Majale, M. (2010). Furthering the urban agenda in developing countries:Guidelines for preparing national State of Cities Reports. International Development Planning Review, 32(1), 71–92. doi:10.3828/idpr.2009.14
State of Cities Reports (SoCRs) are an important tool for urban planning and have been used increasingly over the past decade. They are based on the underlying belief that cities are important at national, regional and global scales and that they are fundamentally different from smaller places and rural areas and, thus, require specific analyses and responses. A second underlying belief is that it is useful to look at groups of cities, for example, all the cities in a particular country. They offer a way of increasing the profile of cities in national policy and improving data compilation and analysis to support urban planning at national and local levels. Through reflection on experiences of SoCRs in South Africa and Iraq, the authors compile a set of guidelines to assist teams charged with the task of compiling SoCRs, especially in developing countries.
Smit, W., Simon, D., Durakovic, E., Dymitrow, M., Haysom, G., Hemström, K & Riise, J. (2021) The challenge of conflicting rationalities about urban development: experiences from Mistra Urban Futures' transdisciplinary urban research. Trialog 137 Vol 2/2019, March 2021.
May, T., & Perry, B. (2011). Contours and conflicts in scale: Science, knowledge and urban development. Local Economy: The Journal of the Local Economy Policy Unit, 26(8), 715-720.
Cirolia, L. R., & Smit, W. (2017). Fractured approaches to urban transformation: Analysing parallel perspectives in South Africa. Transformation: Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa, 95(1), 63–84. doi:10.1353/trn.2017.0022