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Many UK UEF members are concerned the recent Government budget and current policies are doing nothing to recognise and build on the vital role our parks and public green spaces deliver.

We respectfully urge the adoption of a ten-point plan demonstrating the UK Government is serious about building back better from the Covid-19 pandemic and meeting its legally agreed targets laid out in the Paris Agreement.

Read our full letter to the DEFRA Minister.

This E-book shares Best Practice examples presented at the World Urban Forum WUF10 at Abu Dhabi 2020. The examples were proposed by members of the UK Urban Ecology Forum.

UK Urban Ecology Forum attended WUF10 in Abu Dhabi February 2020.

The key areas of participation were:

  • Networking event in partnership with the University of Pennsylvania.
  • Participation in the UN Habitat Global Stakeholders Forum Networking Event.
  • Attendance at roundtables, training events, networking events, etc.

Invitation to forthcoming World Urban Forum (WUF) 7-13 February 2020 in Abu Dhabi

UKUEF  has been invited to participate in the 10th session of the World Urban Forum (WUF), 7-13 February 2020 in Abu Dhabi. UK UEF is Partner Member of The Global Stakeholders Forum (GSF) which will use the 2 yearly WUF meetings and the 4 yearly UN Habitat Assembly meetings to progress the GSF, working towards the development of a proposal and roadmap towards development of a stakeholder engagement institutional mechanism.

This 10th Session of the WUF will be “Cities of Opportunities: Connecting Culture and Innovation”.

As a result of Judy Ling Wong’s participation in the First Global Stakeholders Forum of the UN Habitat Assembly in Nairobi May 25-26 2019, UK Urban Ecology Forum is now a Partner Member of the Global Stakeholder Forum (GFS). UN-Habitat informed stakeholders of ongoing processes that sought to strengthen the Agency’s engagement with all stakeholders. The development of the stakeholder engagement policy, and the stakeholder collaborative framework for implementation of the New Urban Agenda were presented as strategic steps towards aligning contributions of stakeholders with the new strategic plan for the period 2020 to 2025.

Stakeholders shared innovative mechanisms for promoting better quality of life and suggested how to better collaborate in the implementation of the agreed themes and coordination frameworks and mechanisms. They emphasized a need for enhanced advocacy, inclusivity and giving voice to all stakeholders.

The 16-member high level stakeholder Advisory Group of experts and leaders co-chaired by Ms. Dyan Currie, President of the Commonwealth Association of Planners and Professor Siraj Sait, Director of Centre for Islamic Finance, Law, and Communities from the University of East London; and the Co-Secretaries are Ms. Shamoy Hajare, Founder and CEO of the Jamaica School for Social Entrepreneurship and Mr. George Wasonga, the Chief Executive Officer of the Civil Society Urban Development Platform.

A key outcome is the Declaration of the First Global Stakeholder Forum of the UN Habitat Assembly, which was presented at Nairobi.

Vice Chair Judy Ling Wong CBE will attend on behalf of the Forum. The UN-Habitat Stakeholder Forum provides an opportunity for stakeholders to dialogue on multi stakeholders’ contribution to innovation for better quality of life in cities and communities: key policy implications; and to discuss how stakeholders can make substantive contributions to UN-Habitat work.

The Forum’s affiliation to UN-Habitat results from Forum Chair Richard Scott’s attendance at the UN’s World Urban Forum (WUF9) in Kuala Lumpur in February 2018

George Barker commissioned the report which opened up the whole field of the benefits of nature and green-spaces in urban areas. David Goode has written a tribute to George on the Nature of Cities website.

Taking place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in February 2018, which has been recognized by the General Assembly resolution 70/210 as the first session to have a thematic focus on the implementation of the New Urban Agenda adopted at the United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development, Habitat III.
The New Urban Agenda aims:

  • raise awareness of sustainable urbanization among stakeholders and constituencies, including the general public;
  • improve the collective knowledge of sustainable urban development through inclusive open debates, sharing of lessons learned and the exchange of best practices and good policies; and
  • increase coordination and cooperation between different stakeholders and constituencies for the advancement and implementation of sustainable urbanization.

The aim is to inform members about latest developments in green infrastructure, inspire them to use green infrastructure in their work and connect them to people and organisations who can help.

Four speakers will talk about their work in the morning, and the afternoon is spent in small groups, visiting each speaker in turn for a more in-depth conversation about the issues.

This year’s speakers are:

  • Rhian Power-Battrick from the Wales European Funding Office who will look back on how green infrastructure has been delivered with EU funding in Wales;
  • Tom Bramley from Merthyr Tydfil County Borough Council who will reveal what Merthyr Tydfil County Borough Council learned about people and green space when researching their Open Space Strategy;
  • Peter Wootton-Beard from Aberystwyth University who will describe how green roofs and green walls affect the urban micro climate;
  • Nick Grayson of Birmingham City Council and The University of Birmingham who will tell us how the UK’s first Biophilic City plans to improve life for people and nature over the next quarter century.

The meeting is free, but there are a limited number of places and priority is given to colleagues working in Wales.

The survey was last commissioned in 2011 and this new survey will demonstrate interesting changes over the last 6 years.

Greenspace Scotland will be using data from the Ordnance Survey greenspace maps and the attitude survey to produce the third State of Scotland’s Greenspace Report which is also due to be published this autumn.

This new free Greenspace layer in OS Maps is the easiest way to discover greenspaces across Britain.

A new framework that that lays out how cities should be planned and managed to best promote sustainable urbanization.

Bringing artists, environmentalists and community together.
12-13 May 2015. Various venues and sites.

Bringing artists, environmentalists and community together to enable full participation.

2 day weekend event: 31 May/1 June 2014, 10.00am – 5.00pm, Liverpool.

At the general meeting of the Forum held in London on October 17th 2012 Dr. Alison Millward was elected to succeed Professor Ian Douglas as Chair of UK MAB Urban Forum. Dr. Millward will be assisted by Vice Chairs Judy Ling Wong and Ambra Burls. Professor Douglas will remain a valued Member and Fellow of the Forum. Nigel Lawson has stood down as Honorary Secretary and will remain a Member of the Forum. Celia Spouncer, Kerry Morrison and David Haley have become Members of the Forum.

UK MAB Urban Forum has responded to Defra’s invitation to respond to its discussion document ‘ An invitation to shape the Natural Environment of England’ in advance of the planned White Paper on the Natural Environment.

Tree lined street

The concern is trees in the urban environment and the purpose of the conference is to change how urban trees are managed. The conference was controversial and will reflect passion rather than just academic debate. The conference considered the case for and against street tress and addressed issues such as health and well-being, economics, aesthetics, wind throw effects on trees, and insurance. The aim is to change policy and practice.

The Handbook, which is due to be published by Routledge in 2010, will be a publication of UK MAB Urban Forum and will include the Forum logo. The aim of the handbook is to provide in depth coverage of the main elements involved in all aspects of practical urban ecology, providing sufficient background of the basic science and the social, political, governance and planning ideas to help practitioners and students with the wealth of interdisciplinary information needed to manage the biota and green landscapes in urban areas: the places where most of the world’s people first came into contact with nature. It is global in scope and should be useful throughout the world. Further details can be found on the publishers website.