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October 14, 1999

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Global City-Regions Conference At UCLA

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LOS ANGELES

All over the world, cities are growing at a phenomenal rate. In just five years, half the world's population will live in urbanized areas -- many of them with populations larger than those of many small countries.

But rapid growth has overwhelmed traditional city systems. Some residents of the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi have to walk for two hours to get drinking water. In Manila, traffic crawls at an average of eight miles per hour. Children in Mexico City use gray crayons when asked to draw the sky.

And urban regions' new role as the engines driving the global economy has created a daunting range of dramatic challenges. In California's Silicon Valley, for example, dazzling economic success has also bred a housing shortage, traffic gridlock, and a growing chasm between the rich and the poor.

Why are cities -- or, more accurately, city-regions -- growing so rapidly and how can working new economic, political and social systems be developed will be the focus of the 1999 Global City-Regions Conference at UCLA between October 21 and 23.

Organized by the School of Public Policy and Social Research, the conference will feature more than 70 international policy makers, scholars, businesspeople and community leaders. Among those attending the convention are Sir Peter Hall of University College, London, Michael Porter of Harvard, Akin Mabogunje of Nigeria and international business consultant Kenichi Ohmae.

Others include Lucien Bouchard, the premier of Quebec; Eberhard Diepgen, mayor of Berlin; Ketso Gordhan, chief executive officer, Greater Johannesburg Metropolitan Council, South Africa; Jens Kramer Mikkelsen, mayor of Copenhagen and mayors of many cities including Sydney and Cuiritba, Brazil.

James Wolfensohn, president of the World Bank, will be the keynote speaker on Thursday, October 21, at the Getty Center. The remainder of the conference will be held at the Tom Bradley International Center on the UCLA campus.

"For the vast majority of the world's six billion people, the questions we debate and the solutions we consider are not mere abstractions. They will be as real as a four-hour commute or a two-hour walk for a drink of water," said Allen J Scott, UCLA professor of policy studies and geography and conference organizer.

The chief goal of the conference is to change the way people think about city-regions, Scott said.

"Rapid global change has rendered obsolete most of the systems we have developed not just to make cities livable but those we use to govern economic life or how we function as citizens," he said. "We want to find new ways of thinking about these dynamics and to propose new policies to harness their benefits and control their negative effects."

The three-day, interdisciplinary conference -- a mix of lectures, presentations of papers, roundtable discussions, practical workshops and informal discussion -- will focus on four critical areas: economic development, social welfare, the environmental consequences of urbanization, and governance.

Among the questions to be addressed are:

  • How do you govern city regions that are not only enormous in size -- at least 20 of the world's metropolitan areas are now home to more than 10 million people -- but enormously diverse?

  • How can policy-makers plan for the public interest in, say, Los Angeles, when Southern California's fate is closely linked to what happens in Taiwan or Thailand?

  • How can the growing gap between large groups of marginalized, low-wage labor migrants and the rest of urban society be addressed without choking off continued economic growth?

  • How can we foster sustainable growth that doesn't destroy the quality of life in city-regions and the health of their inhabitants?

    Addressing these and other vital questions will be scholars, policy-makers and businesspeople from two dozen countries and six continents.

    A complete conference program and other information can be found at www.sppsr.ucla.edu/globalcityregions.

    The conference proceedings will be published in book form by Oxford University Press.

    For information, contact Jim Tranquada jtranq@ucla.edu; (310) 206-8966

    If you would like to post any information about forthcoming events or community happenings, please email the details to bettypais@aol.com

    Information and photographs can also be mailed to Betty Pais at 87-52 108th Street, 2nd Floor, Richmond Hill, NY 11418-2229, USA.

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