Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T01:32:05.495Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Diagnosis on the implementation of the New Urban Agenda

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 September 2024

Jose Manuel Diaz-Sarachaga*
Affiliation:
GTDS Research Group, Universidad de Oviedo, C/Catedratico Valentin Alvarez s/n, 33006 Oviedo, Spain
Joana Longo Sarachaga
Affiliation:
ESIC University, Language Department, Av. de Valdenigrales s/n, 28223 Pozuelo de Alarcón, Madrid, Spain
*
Corresponding author: Jose Manuel Diaz-Sarachaga; Email: diazsjose@uniovi.es

Abstract

Non-technical summary

Rapid population growth in urban areas requires an effective transposition of sustainable development goals to the urban realm, for which the New Urban Agenda was adopted by most countries worldwide. The progress report of its implementation was discussed in this study to identify strengths and weaknesses in the process that assist nations in the design and application of effective actions to achieve a more sustainable urban development.

Technical summary

The adoption of the 2030 Agenda represents a daunting challenge for countries worldwide, which found its continuation in the New Urban Agenda (NUA) geared predominantly toward urban settlements. Although the achievement of the sustainable development goals (SDGs) has been widely monitored by global and national institutions, the progress of the NUA has not been properly addressed to date. With the purpose of filling this gap, this study aims to gauge the implementation level of the NUA through the analysis of all status reports issued hitherto by countries, on the basis of the reporting template designed to this effect by the United Nations. Findings revealed the scarce attention paid to report national progress on the application of the NUA, particularly marked in the most developed economies. Reporting guidelines showed a poor coverage of the SDGs, being mostly focused on a limited number of these as well as the institutional and economic dimensions. The low level of NUA implementation and the questionable effectiveness of the reporting framework for monitoring are main conclusions. Some recommendations were lastly suggested to enhance the application process of the NUA.

Social media summary

Most countries worldwide show little interest in the application of the New Urban Agenda.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

1. Introduction

Although the New Urban Agenda (NUA) (UN, 2016a) can be regarded as an extension of the 2030 Agenda (UN, 2015), more specifically, as the transposition of the sustainable development goals (SDGs) to the urban realm, the first United Nations (UN) Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat I), held in 1976, marked the inception of further opportunities associated with urbanization to strengthen the social, economic, environmental, and institutional domains of communities (Bridges, Reference Bridges2016). The recognition of the need for sustainable human settlements and the impacts of rapid urbanization, mainly in the least developed countries, was the main conclusion of this conference (UN, 1976), which also laid the foundation for the creation of the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat) in 1978. UN-Habitat pursues the promotion of sustainable towns and cities worldwide within the UN system.

Two primary topics inspired the second UN Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat II) in 1996: adequate housing and viable human settlements. The Istanbul Declaration and Habitat Agenda was adopted in this conference to express the commitment of governments to reach the objectives of sustainable human settlements and adequate housing for all (UN, 1996). Under the projection that 70% of world population will be housed in cities by mid-century (World Bank, 2024), the UN Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development (Habitat III) was celebrated in 2016 to arrive at a consensus on defining a new global standard for encouraging sustainability in cities (UN, 2016b). At the end of Habitat III, the Quito Declaration provided 175 paragraphs as part of the NUA, a call for countries to build cities safer and more sustainable, resilient, and inclusive. All in line with the 17 SDGs and particularly with SDG11: Sustainable cities and communities (Arslan et al., Reference Arslan, Durak and Aytac2016). Developing synergies between SDG11 and the NUA is pivotal to foster an effective sustainable urbanization process. Additionally to the principles drawn from Habitats I and II, the NUA is fundamentally based on the ‘right to the city’, a term coined by Lefebvre (Reference Lefebvre1968) to underscore the importance of inclusivity, accessibility, and democracy in urban areas.

In contrast to the SDGs, the NUA was initially conceived without a concrete monitoring instrument to assess progress (Diaz-Sarachaga, Reference Diaz-Sarachaga2019), which significantly hinders the understanding of urban challenges (Khalid et al., Reference Khalid, Sharma and Dubey2018) and making-decision process (Klopp & Petretta, Reference Klopp and Petretta2017). The formulation of SDGs as an appraisal framework for the NUA was also discarded before the start of Habitat III (Schindler, Reference Schindler2017). A set of guidelines to assist countries in annually reporting on the implementation of the NUA was nevertheless released by the UN in 2019 (Urban Agenda Platform, 2024).

The efficient monitoring of the NUA requires globally standardized and comparable data (Robin et al., Reference Robin, Steenmans and Acuto2019) that is often hampered by a low production of urban information (McPhearson et al., Reference McPhearson, Parnell, Simon, Gaffney, Elmqvist, Bai, Roberts and Revi2016), mainly due to difficulties of localities devoid of support from national governments (Acuto & Parnell, Reference Acuto and Parnell2016). But quantitative disclosures must also be accompanied by the development of knowledge capacities that feed into the NUA (Caprotti et al., Reference Caprotti, Cowley, Datta, Broto, Gao, Georgeson, Herrick, Odendaal and Joss2017). With this objective, this study aims to diagnose the current state of the NUA after it comes into effect. Grounded on the guidelines established for the UN to report the progress in the implementation of the NUA, all national reports published until November 2023 were examined to outline shortcomings in the process. Three research questions (RQs) were formulated to organize the study: (RQ1) what is the current status of reporting?, (RQ2) what is the correspondence between UN guidelines and the SDGs?, and (RQ3) which level of coverage of UN guidelines do countries display in their reports and what is their linkage with the SDGs?

This study makes a twofold contribution to the extant body of knowledge. First, it critically reviews the template specifically designed to report the progress on the application of the NUA worldwide in order to identify weaknesses and opportunities for improvement. And second, it provides a realistic vision on the status of the implementation process and its implication in the achievement of the SDGs at the national level and on a regional scale that permits to design effective action plans for the countries lagging behind and thus, increase the efficiency of the NUA regulatory framework as an instrument for boosting sustainable development in the urban environment. The novelty of this work lies in the joint analysis of all countries that employed the same reporting framework in the appraisal of the implementation of the NUA.

The article is further arranged into five sections. After determining the theoretical framework of the research, Section 3 depicts the proposed methodology, and results are presented in Section 4. Finally, main conclusions are summarized.

2. Background

Literature on the NUA embraces a broad range of topics (Cociña et al., Reference Cociña, Frediani, Acuto and Levy2019), though, urban governance is predominant among them (Hague, Reference Hague2018). The NUA hence rests on participatory processes and the paramount role played by inhabitants as the core of urban development plans seeking equality of rights and opportunities for all as well as promoting social diversity (Parnell, Reference Parnell2016). Multi-level collaboration and integrated governance are also outlined in the NUA, comprising the participation of actors at the same level and in different levels along with the implication of different stakeholders (Leck & Simon, Reference Leck and Simon2018). Dahiya and Das (Reference Dahiya, Das, Dahiya and Das2020) discussed the relevance of the NUA in terms of governance, decentralization, and democratization of cities. Urban decentralization has nonetheless come under criticism because power sharing has not been accompanied by financial capacity of local governments (Haase et al., Reference Haase, Güneralp, Dahiya, Bai, Elmqvist, Elmqvist, Bai, Frantzeskaki, Griffith, Maddox, McPhearson, Parnell, Romero-Lankao, Simon and Watkins2018).

The commitments made by each country that signed the NUA include the development of a respective National Urban Policy (NUP) as a framework to guide and monitor the attainment of urban objectives in each country (Hohmann, Reference Hohmann2017). This instrument also assists in the incorporation of SDG11 in local governance (Sietchiping & Omwamba, Reference Sietchiping, Omwamba, Nunes Silva and Trono2020). Despite the emphasis on NUPs, a few number of countries have applied explicit urban policies; for instance, only a third of European member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) have met this requirement (OECD, 2016). In this vein, the inconsistency and inadequacy of the NUA has been highlighted because it is mostly based on ideas rather than statistics, analyses, or forecasting models (Okraszewska et al., Reference Okraszewska, Jamroz, Michalski, Zukowska, Grzelec and Birr2019).

Urban planning was regarded as a crucial response in the NUA to handle major urbanization challenges (Corbett & Mellouli, Reference Corbett and Mellouli2017) from differing viewpoints, inter alia, climate change (Bandauko et al., Reference Bandauko, Annan-Aggrey and Arku2021), informal urbanization (Alfaro d'Alençon et al., Reference Alfaro d'Alençon, Smith, Eva Álvarez de Andrés, Cabrera, Fokdal, Lombard, Mazzolini, Michelutti, Moretto and Spire2018), women safety (Mahadevia & Lathia, Reference Mahadevia and Lathia2019), human wellbeing (Turok & Parnell, Reference Turok and Parnell2009), informality (McGranahan et al., Reference McGranahan, Schensul and Singh2016), public spaces (Moser, Reference Moser2017), typology of urban space (Satterthwaite, Reference Satterthwaite2016), and social housing (Mycoo, Reference Mycoo2017); however, attention was principally focused on transport and mobility (Okraszewska et al., Reference Okraszewska, Romanowska, Wołek, Oskarbski, Birr and Jamroz2018). Walkability and urban cycling are promoted in the interest of enhancing health and shifting toward a sustainable mobility approach (Privitera, Reference Privitera, Nunes Silva and Trono2020). Furthermore, they contribute to devise measures concerning the betterment of road safety and transportation design, and therefore, the reduction of urban pollution (Pucher & Buehler, Reference Pucher and Buehler2017), among other benefits.

Several geographical areas have been subject of study to examine the application of the NUA. Inclusiveness of women was addressed in India by increasing governance of basic amenities, proposing activities and services, and considering gender issues in planning and design (Mehaffy et al., Reference Mehaffy, Haas and Elmlund2019). The implementation of SDG11 in the Indian Urban Policy was analyzed in Vaidya and Chatterji (Reference Vaidya, Chatterji, Franco, Chatterji, Derbyshire and Tracey2020). Recommendations of the NUA were adopted by the Rwandan government in fundraising to provide free public spaces for citizens throughout the country (Gubic & Baloi, Reference Gubic and Baloi2019). Grounded in the African context, Van Noorloos and Kloosterboer (Reference Van Noorloos and Kloosterboer2018) assessed the impact of urban and territorial planning on sustainable urbanization in the frame of the NUA.

The uncritical application of all metrics defined in the NUA and SDG11 was seriously questioned in Angola as a practice to sideline interests of minorities (Silva, Reference Silva, Nunes Silva and Trono2020). Other African governments realized the urge to coordinate policies to strengthen sustainable urban development in accordance with SDG11 and the NUA (Krellenberg et al., Reference Krellenberg, Bergsträßer, Bykova, Kress and Tyndall2019). In this respect some nations such as Kenya, Liberia, Malawi, South Africa, and Uganda have enacted NUPs as drivers of the NUA (Cartwright et al., Reference Cartwright, Palmer, Taylor, Pieterse, Parnell and Colenbrander2018). In Europe, Patterson (Reference Patterson, Nunes Silva and Trono2020) explored the connection between the existing urban regulatory framework and the NUA in the United Kingdom.

Although the engagement of private sectors and social agents in the fulfillment of the NUA is a common denominator for the Asia-Pacific cities (Bajracharya & Khan, Reference Bajracharya, Khan, Dahiya and Das2020), some countries such as Indonesia were more concerned about the proliferation of sub-national levels of government, which interferes in the application of the NUA across the country as stated in Salim and Hudalah (Reference Salim, Hudalah, Dahiya and Das2020). The Caribbean region faces particular challenges related to the NUA, which recommends the draft of a specific NUA reflecting the singularities of the Caribbean Small Island Developing States (Mycoo & Bharath, Reference Mycoo and Bharath2021). A similar insight was employed by Watson (Reference Watson2021) to suggest distinct actions for the Global North to perform the objectives of the NUA.

The tenets of the NUA hold many parallels with other initiatives prior to Habitat III Conference, for example, the 1996 Charter of the New Urbanism powered by the Congress for the New Urbanism, a nonprofit organization headquartered in the United States. The Charter consists of a collection of urban characteristics to guide public policy, development practice, urban planning, and design under the premise that human settlements are a combination of the art of building, the making of community, and the preservation of the environment (CNU, 2024). Notwithstanding the above, the potential for reductionism in the NUA was highly emphasized due to the exclusion of some forms of urban space in detriment of new tendencies in global urban policies (Caprotti et al., Reference Caprotti, Cowley, Datta, Broto, Gao, Georgeson, Herrick, Odendaal and Joss2017). Alternatively, the definition of adequate indicators (Valencia et al., Reference Valencia, Simon, Croese, Nordqvist, Oloko, Sharma and Versace2019) and the production of urban data (Simon et al., Reference Simon, Arfvidsson, Anand, Bazaz, Fenna, Foster, Jain, Hansson, Evans, Moodley, Nyambuga, Oloko, Ombara, Patel, Perry, Primo, Revi, Van Niekerk, Wharton and Wright2016) are both essential to perform diagnostics on the progress of the NUA (Garcia-Peña et al., Reference García-Peña, González-Medina and Diaz-Sarachaga2021). Finding a balance between available urban statistics and the set of existing metrics has consequently become a formidable challenge for local governments (Kitchin et al., Reference Kitchin, Lauriault and McArdle2015). Some solutions were proposed to remedy data gaps, that is, the development of proxies (Alkema et al., Reference Alkema, Jones and Lai2013), but the nexus between the production of urban knowledge and local needs should be explored in depth to streamline the NUA (Dovey & Ristic, Reference Dovey and Ristic2017). This study is intended to bridge this gap by analyzing all reports issued by countries in the process of implementing the NUA to identify main weaknesses that shed light on the present situation.

3. Methodology

Figure 1 displays the tiered protocol designed to discuss the operationalization of the NUA from its entry into force in October 2016. First, the document containing the UN guidelines for reporting the implementation of the NUA was examined. Afterward, the present status of the reporting produced by the signatory countries of the NUA was ascertained. The correlation between the UN guidelines and the 2030 Agenda was established in the third phase. Coverage of the guidelines by nations was appraised in the last stage.

Figure 1. Methodological approach.

Source: Authors.

3.1 Preliminary revision of the status report template on the NUA

Because the guidelines of the UN status report template on the NUA are clustered in a three-tier scheme encompassing: parts, themes, and subthemes, a qualitative content analysis was undertaken to categorize all matters covered. An exploratory review provided an initial coding characterizing the scope of each guideline with any of the keywords included in the description of themes and subthemes. A second review employed those codes to recognize the main focal points of the guidelines. Besides, the qualitative or quantitative nature of the guidelines was pinpointed, for which next criteria were applied: (i) feasibility of devising an indicator that may be quantitatively measured, and (ii) data availability in publicly accessible sources.

3.2 Reporting on the application of the NUA worldwide

All national reports available on the repository of the Urban Agenda Platform (2024) were comprehensively screened to shed light on the current status of reporting (RQ1). Several aspects were specifically examined to this end: (i) identification of the countries that released annual progress reports; (ii) group of engaged countries based on the UN M49 Standard Country or Area Codes for Statistical Use of the United Nations Statistics Division (Europe and Northern America, sub-Saharan Africa, Northern Africa and Western Asia, Central and Southern Asia, Eastern and South-Eastern Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Oceania) (UNSTATS, 2024); (iii) language employed; (iv) year of publication; and (v) degree of alignment with the UN guidelines.

3.3 Linking the NUA with the sustainable development goals

Although the NUA emanates from the 2030 Agenda and consequently from the SDGs (Table 1), it is pertinent to explore their connection with the recommended UN guidelines for presenting the progress of the implementation of the NUA and its contribution toward the SDGs in order to address RQ2. The liaison between guidelines and the SDGs was established by accurately correlating the description of the former with the scope of the 169 SDG targets and 232 SDG indicators comprised in the 17 SDGs. Both were taken as reference in this process because they better itemize the extent of each SDG. Hence there is the possibility that each guideline is related to more than one SDG. Special attention was paid to SDG11 centered on cities. The coverage of the four sustainability pillars was reviewed by the same method considering the dimensions associated with SDGs (Table 1), mostly accepted in literature (Diaz-Sarachaga et al., Reference Diaz-Sarachaga, Jato-Espino and Castro-Fresno2018).

Table 1. Sustainable development goals

Source: UN (2015).

3.4 Achievement of the UN guidelines by the national reports

All national reports were examined to determine the guidelines pertaining to actions led by nations in the attainment of the NUA. They were then organized in the seven geographical areas listed in 3.2 to perform a study per region. A transversal analysis examining how the distinct areas dealt with UN guidelines was also completed.

The absence of metrics hampered attempts to evaluate progress on each guideline. The SDG index ranking was therefore used to compare efforts made by nations toward the SDGs and their advancement on the NUA for the years in which status reports were published. This composite index was built by Bertelsmann Stiftung and Sustainable Development Solutions Network in 2015 to benchmark the progress of UN members in the accomplishment of the SDGs. Data availability was determinant to select diverse indicators representing each SDG to be scored in a range from 0 to 100 points. The arithmetic mean of all SDG scores determines the value of the SDG index to rank countries (Diaz-Sarachaga et al., Reference Diaz-Sarachaga, Jato-Espino and Castro-Fresno2018). Furthermore, a traffic-light chart assesses where a country stands on each SDG to identify priority actions to meet them. The framework also specifies the SDGs associated with major challenges to be faced by each country. The performance on these challenges is rated by a four-level scale: on track, moderately increasing, stagnating, and decreasing (SDSN, 2020).

Next protocol was proposed with the intention of analyzing the quality of national reports on the implementation of the NUA in relation to SDGs monitoring. Drawing on the relationship between the UN guidelines and SDGs defined in 3.3, the progress reports were reviewed to first determine the SDGs tackled by the UN guidelines per nation. Second, the SDGs with decreasing performance related to the major challenges prescribed for countries in the SDG index framework were listed. Lastly, the correlation between both initiatives was appraised by studying the correspondence among the SDGs identified following the two prior steps.

4. Results

This section was organized along the lines of the four methodological phases previously outlined. UN guidelines were introduced in Section 4.1, whereas the subsequent sections responded to the three RQs posed in Section 1.

4.1 Review of the UN guidelines for reporting the application of the NUA

As response to resolution RES/71/256 adopted by the UN General Assembly in December 2016 (UN- Habitat, 2016), a set of guidelines were formulated to provide a common framework for countries in the preparation of reports to monitor the progress on the implementation process of the NUA. The document encompasses three distinct parts. The first one presents 28 guidelines grouped into three themes: social inclusion and ending poverty; inclusive urban prosperity; and sustainable and resilient development of cities. Thirty guidelines for an effective implementation were advised in the second part, focused on three themes such as building the urban governance structure, urban spatial development, and means for implementing. The last part contains no guidelines for monitoring and review of reports for local, subnational, and national governments.

Table A1 shows all guidelines on the basis of a categorized structure. After reviewing the depiction of the 58 guidelines, a list of 16 codes was determined grounded on related themes/subthemes as follows: poverty (1.1/1.1.1), social inclusion (1.1/1.1.1), housing (1.1/1.1.2), basic services (1.1/1.1.3), social prosperity (1.2/1.2.1), economic development (1.2/1.2.1), environmental preservation (1.3/1.3.1), urban resilience (1.3/1.3.1), responsible resources consumption (1.3/1.3.2), energy efficiency (1.3/1.3.2), capacity building (2.1, 2.2, 2.3/2.3.2), digitalization (2.3/2.3.3), funding (2.3/2.3.1), cultural heritage (2.2), urban development (2.2), and sustainable mobility (2.2).

Capacity building (16), housing (6), and economic development (5) were the topics most referred to in the UN guidelines. Poverty, energy efficiency, culture heritage, sustainable mobility, and urban development, contrarily, were only represented by one guideline each as exhibited in Table 2.

Table 2. Coding of UN guidelines

Source: Authors.

Only 48 of the 56 guidelines satisfy the two criteria proposed in Section 3.1 and therefore, they are eligible for being assessed for quantitative indicators. The complex formulation of metrics to quantitatively appraise guidelines 2.1.1.3 (‘Develop legal and policy frameworks to enhance the ability of governments to implement urban policies’), 2.1.1.4 (‘Build the capacity of local and subnational governments to implement local and metropolitan multilevel governance’), 2.2.1.1 (‘Implement integrated and balanced territorial development policies’), 2.2.1.6 (‘Strengthen the role of small and intermediate cities and towns’), 2.3.3.2 (‘Expand deployment of frontier technologies and innovations to enhance shared prosperity of cities and regions’), and 2.3.2.8 (‘Increase cooperation and knowledge exchange on science, technology and innovation to benefit sustainable urban development’) alongside the inexistence of related statistical data do not make it possible to devise quantitative indicators for them.

This study has deliberately omitted the proposal of specific indicators to avoid potential bias in their interpretation due to the broad scope of the guidelines.

4.2 Implementation level of the NUA

From the 194 nations embroiled in the completion of the NUA (UN, 2016a), just 40 countries posted reports on its application until November 2023, representing by one-fifth of the total. Figure 2 illustrates the countries that published status reports. The highest number of reports corresponded to Northern Africa and Western Asia (11), sub-Saharan Africa (10), and Latin America and the Caribbean (9). On the other hand, no country from Central and Southern Asia and Oceania submitted any report. Europe and Northern America and Eastern and South-Eastern Asia regions presented respectively, six and four reports. Among the 38 OECD member countries, only nine issued reports.

Figure 2. Regional distribution of nations reporting the implementation status of the NUA.

Source: Authors.

English was the preferred language in reporting (28), meanwhile, Arabic, French, and Spanish accounted for four reports each. Regarding the publication year, 2021 (23) and 2022 (14) displayed the largest number of reports, unlike 2020 (1) and 2023 (2).

In response to RQ1, the level of reporting on the progress of the NUA was very low to this day, seeing that 20.61% of the countries adhered to this initiative have released a national report. Geographical spread was also quite uneven. Paradoxically, the less developed nations have published more reports than the richest economies, which is consistent with the literature reviewed in Section 2. Although the 38 OECD countries pursue the promotion of policies to improve the economic and well-being of people worldwide, fewer than a quarter issued the NUA progress report. And only Germany, representing the seven most advanced economies in the world, elaborated an annual report. Alternatively, Czech Republic, Dominican Republic, Germany, Spain, and Zimbabwe discarded the application of the guidelines suggested by the UN.

The arbitrary use of distinct languages and report forms alongside the irregular temporary distribution of publications denote the absence of precise directives on that subject, and generally on the reporting process itself.

4.3 Composition of the UN guidelines regarding the 2030 Agenda

The uneven allocation of the guidelines by sustainability dimensions and related SDGs is shown in Figure 3 giving response to RQ2. SDG17: Partnerships for the goals (15); SDG11: Sustainable cities and societies (12); SDG16: Peace, justice, and strong institutions (10); and SDG9: Industry, innovation, and infrastructure (8) had the greatest correspondence, ranging from 24.59% (SDG17) to 13.11% (SDG9) of all guidelines. On the contrary, SDG8: Decent work and economic growth (5); SDG6: Clean water and sanitation; SDG10: Reduced inequalities and SDG13: Climate action (2 each); and SDG1: No poverty, SDG5: Gender equality, SDG7: Affordable and clean energy, SDG12: Responsible consumption and production and SDG15: Life on land (1 each) covered by 28% of the totality of guidelines. SDG2: Zero hunger, SDG3: Good health and well-being, SDG4: Quality education, and SDG14: Life below water were nevertheless not represented in the reporting template.

Figure 3. Sharing of the UN guidelines by SDG and sustainability domain.

Source: Authors.

In terms of sustainability facets, the institutional domain (37) prevailed over the other dimensions: economic (9), environmental (6), and social (4). Even though the 12 guidelines associated with SDG11, only three out of the 10 SDG11 targets were linked to them, namely, SDG11.b: Adoption and implementation of integrated policies and plans toward inclusion, resource efficiency, mitigation, and adaptation to climate change, and resilience to disasters (4); SDG11.1: Access for all to adequate, safe, and affordable housing and basic services (3); and SDG11.7: Universal access to safe, inclusive, and accessible, green and public spaces (1).

Despite the fact that 13 out of the 17 SDGs are tied to the UN guidelines, the representativeness of the SDGs in the report form is controversial. A finite number of SDGs (5) have agglutinated 50 of all guidelines (82%). And similarly, institutional and economic facets concentrated the majority of guidelines with 66 and 16%, respectively. This acute focus on governance matters was strongly highlighted by Corbett and Mellouli (Reference Corbett and Mellouli2017) and Hague (Reference Hague2018). It is however very striking that some topics traditionally associated with the less developed countries such as hunger (SDG2), good health and well-being (SDG3), and education (SDG4) were fully overlooked, even when these countries predominantly reported the progress on the application of the NUA. The outcome was less surprising when environmental issues occupied the third place in preference, which is in accordance with the scarce literature on this topic, mainly directed toward climate change (Bandauko et al., Reference Bandauko, Annan-Aggrey and Arku2021). As might be expected, the correspondence between UN guidelines and SDG11 was quite high, a wide gamut of urban issues were thus tackled to reach this goal through the adoption of the NUA (Sietchiping & Omwamba, Reference Sietchiping, Omwamba, Nunes Silva and Trono2020; Vaidya & Chatterji, Reference Vaidya, Chatterji, Franco, Chatterji, Derbyshire and Tracey2020).

4.4 Guidelines reported by countries

This section discloses how the 36 nations that published reports on the application of the NUA in English, French, or Spanish from 2020 to 2023 approached the guidelines devised by the UN, for which subthemes of Table A1 were used as references. Reporting of Egypt, Kuwait, Jordan, and Tunisia were discarded due to language constraints derived from their publication in Arabic. Given that there are no subthemes for themes 2.1: Urban governance and 2.2: Urban spatial planning, both were regarded in the analysis that answers RQ3 about the level of coverage shown on the reporting template.

Concerning the Europe and Northern America region (Figure 4), Sweden, Germany, and Czech Republic submitted reports completely out of alignment with the guidelines. From the rest of the nations, all subthemes (12) were handled by Finland as opposed to Malta (3) and Spain (1). Subtheme 1.1.1: Social inclusion/poverty was prevalent in these three nations; nevertheless, Finland was the unique one in implementing the four prescribed guidelines for this subtheme.

Figure 4. Guidelines deemed by country in Europe and Northern America (a) and OECD (b).

Source: Authors.

Turkiye, Mexico, Costa Rica, and Colombia together with the above European countries were the OECD members reporting on the NUA progress. The performance of Turkiye was notable, covering all the 12 subthemes, excluding subtheme 1.2.2: Sustainable prosperity. Colombia, Costa Rica, and Mexico addressed sequentially, 10, 8, and 7 subthemes.

The nine countries releasing national reports in sub-Saharan Africa evidenced a higher yield in comparison to the seven nations of Northern Africa and Western Asia (Figure 5). With regard to the latter area, Turkiye (11) fulfilled the highest number of subthemes, followed by Saudi Arabia and Palestine with 9 and 6 ones, while Morocco and Bahrain, and Algeria and Lebanon met 5 and 4 subthemes, accordingly. No country achieved the total guidelines defined for each subtheme in the UN report. Ghana (10), Tanzania (9), Cameroun and Nigeria (7 each), and Botswana and South Africa (6 each) embraced most subthemes in sub-Saharan Africa. Senegal (4), Malawi (3), and Zimbabwe (1), on the contrary, showed the lowest alignment with the form. And Kenya launched a national report at its option. Only South Africa and Nigeria completed all the guidelines included in at least a subtheme, namely 1.1.2: Adequate housing.

Figure 5. Distribution of guidelines by nation of Northern Africa and Western Asia (a) and sub-Saharan Africa (b).

Source: Authors.

Four countries from Eastern and South-Eastern Asia posted reporting on the NUA (Figure 6). Both Mongolia and Indonesia tackled 11 out of the 12 subthemes, as distinct from Lao and Malaysia with 2 and 1 ones, respectively. All the four guidelines of subtheme 1.3.1: Urban resilience were present in the reports of Indonesia and Mongolia. In addition, the first-mentioned also covered the three guidelines of subtheme 1.1.3: Access to basic services. In contrast to the unstructured depictions of Dominican Republic and Brazil, the situation in Latin America and the Caribbean was markedly improved. The amount of subthemes ranged from 10 (Colombia) to 4 (Cuba). Within the mid-range, Costa Rica and Ecuador (8 each), Mexico (7), Venezuela (6), and Peru (5). The four guidelines of subtheme 1.1.2: Adequate housing were met by Cuba.

Figure 6. Guidelines shared among countries in Eastern and South-Eastern Asia (a) and Latin America and the Caribbean (b).

Source: Authors.

Some commonalities were discovered in the evaluation of the subject matters coded in Table 2 that gathered the maximum and minimum amount of UN guidelines per region. Latin America and the Caribbean (12); OECD (11); and Northern Africa and Western Asia (10) regarded housing as priority; simultaneously OECD (11), Northern Africa and Western Asia (10); and Europe and Northern America (6) noted the importance of social inclusion and poverty. Sub-Saharan Africa (12) and Eastern and South-Eastern Asia (8) instead put the attention on social prosperity and urban resilience, respectively. On the other hand, Latin America and the Caribbean (2); sub-Saharan Africa (1); and Eastern and South-Eastern Asia (0) disregarded capacity building. Similarly, urban development was overlooked in Latin America and the Caribbean (2) and OECD (5) areas. Basic services and social prosperity were hardly observed in Northern Africa and Western Asia (1) and Europe and Northern America (1).

The coverage of UN guidelines by nations belonging to distinct geographical zones was also very disparate. Finland (31) and Spain (1) reflected a huge gap in Europe and Northern America, and OECD zones. Mongolia (26) and Turkiye (23) collected the highest number of guidelines in Eastern and South-Eastern Asia, and Northern Africa and Western Asia, while the performance of Malaysia (1) and Lebanon (5) was the opposite in these areas. The tendency was similar in Latin America and the Caribbean, and sub-Saharan Africa, with Colombia (16) and Ghana (15) at the top, but Peru (5) and Malawi (3) on the bottom.

On the basis of the publication year of the monitoring report on the application of the NUA, it was determined the ranking granted by the SDG index report (Table 3), the SDGs handled by the UN guidelines in each national report (Table 4), and the major challenges associated with the SDGs to be faced by countries pursuant the SDG index report (Table 5). All to evaluate how guidelines relate to factual SDGs monitoring and priorities of countries.

Table 3. SDG index ranking of countries in 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023

a Palestine was omitted as it is not a UN country member.

In bold font and italics the ranking of the country that reported the progress status of the NUA in this year.

Source: SDSN (2020, 2021, 2022, 2023).

Table 4. SDGs represented in the national reports of the NUA status

Palestine was omitted as it is not a UN country member.

Source: Authors.

Table 5. Major challenges established in the SDG index report

Palestine was omitted as it is not a UN country member.

Publication year: a2020, b2021, c2022, d2023.

Source: SDSN (2020, 2021, 2022, 2023).

Sixteen nations suffered a setback in their rankings from 2020 to 2023, while 15 improved their position (Table 3). And four countries (Czech Republic, Kenya, Lebanon, and South Africa) remained unchanged. Bahrain (29) and Ecuador (28) lost the highest number of places, while Indonesia (26) and Malawi (17) significantly enhanced their rankings. Despite fluctuations in the SDG index ranking, no substantial variations in the evolution of the SDGs were detected during this time. It is therefore consistent the use of data from the SDG index report dating from the year of release of the NUA progress report. The countries of sub-Saharan Africa in a combined way reflected the best performance, unlike those of Northern Africa and Western Asia with the worst pattern. Europe and Northern America experienced no mean change.

As revealed in Table 4, SDG11 and SDG6 were predominantly present in the national reports of 23 countries, followed by SDG8 represented in 20 nations. On the other hand, SDG7 and SDG15 were addressed by six countries, whereas SDG2, SDG3, SDG4, and SDG14 were completely ignored in all reports. Eastern and South-Eastern Asia, and Northern Africa and Western Asia were the regions that displayed the highest average of SDGs tackled per country with 7.25 and 7.16, respectively. The six countries of Europe and Northern America only reached a mean of 2.83 SDGs.

Table 5 reflects the breakdown by country of the SDGs encompassing the major challenges highlighted by the SDG index report for the year in which the national report on the NUA was issued. Most countries, ranging from 27 to 22 ones, are tied, respectively, to SDG2, SDG16, SDG15, SDG3, SDG14, and SDG10. But SDG17 (7), and SDG12 and SDG13 (8 each) comprised of the lowest amount of challenges. Sub-Saharan Africa averaged 19 challenges per nation, rather than the 1.8 ones of Europe and Northern America.

After comparing the SDGs corresponding to the major challenges defined by the SDG index report and the SDGs related to the guidelines of the 35 national reports examined (excluding Palestine as it is not a UN country member), only 26 (74.28%) countries showed a match between challenges and guidelines. Nigeria exhibited the highest level of alignment with eight SDGs (SDG1, SDG5, SDG6, SDG8, SDG10, SDG11, and SDG16). Algeria (SDG8), Ecuador (SDG10), Lebanon (SDG8), Malawi (SDG1), Malta (SDG1), Morocco (SDG5), and Zimbabwe (SDG6) only had an overlap. SDG2, SDG3, SDG4, and SDG14 were overlooked by all the nations. Instead, SDG6 (14) and SDG16 (13) captured the attention of the higher number of countries.

All reports of the six countries of Northern Africa and Western Africa addressed any of the challenges posed by the SDG index report. Sub-Saharan Africa (90%), Eastern and South-Eastern Asia (75%), Latin America and the Caribbean (66.66%), and Europe and Northern America (33.33%) displayed a lower coverage level. Similarly, sub-Saharan Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean followed by Eastern and South-Eastern Asia, and Northern Africa and Western Africa led the regions with the largest number of SDGs representing challenges lined up with UN guidelines with 10 and 8, respectively; Europe and Northern America only with three SDGs.

Some inconsistencies were found when comparing priority subjects derived from the guidelines handled by the countries assessed with the major challenges outlined in the SDG index report, and also represented by the SDGs covered in the national reports. For instance, Europe and Northern America and Northern Africa and Western Asia were mainly concerned about social inclusion and poverty, but SDGs were mostly focused on environmental and economic facets. Housing was a priority for Latin America and the Caribbean, but SDGs pointed toward poverty, gender equality, reduced inequalities, or environment.

Responding to RQ3, the published national reports on the whole revealed a low degree of correspondence with the guidelines suggested in the UN reporting framework. Finland, the nation accounting the greatest amount of guidelines, barely reached the 60% of the total. No strong correlation between the wealthiest nations (OECD) and the covered guidelines was determined, although countries in underdeveloped regions exhibited a better performance. In the same vein, the linkage between the SDGs represented by the guidelines followed a similar trend. Europe and Northern America showed worse records than the other regions. Guidelines designed to ensure the effective implementation of the NUA were the least represented.

5. Conclusions

The implementation process of the NUA endorsed in October 2016 by 194 countries was diagnosed in this article around three RQs. All national progress reports issued on this subject until November 2023 were thoroughly examined to determine the present status of reporting. The correlation between the NUA report form proposed by the UN and the SDGs was also analyzed along with how countries covered the guidelines displayed therein. A protocol based on the SDG index was designed to analyze the quality of national reports in relation to SDGs monitoring. Main conclusions are summarized below:

  • The small number of national reports (40) on the application of the NUA worldwide suggests a low commitment (20.61%) of most countries to fulfill this global initiative. In particular, the implication of the most advanced economies on the planet was sparse, only six reports (15%) were published by countries in this segment. This is in stark contrast to the majority compromise adopted by nations on the achievement of the SDGs as reflected in the ranking of countries displayed in the SDG index reports.

  • Despite the NUA was essentially devised as the pivotal instrument to operationalize the 2030 Agenda and thereby the SDGs in the urban realm, the guidelines defined by the UN partially (76.47%) represent all the 17 SDGs. Likewise, the distribution of the guidelines among the SDGs and sustainability domains is unbalanced toward the institutional (66.08%) and economic (16.07%) facets.

  • The complete absence of monitoring and evaluation guidelines in the NUA report template prevents the quantitative evaluation of countries' progress, which greatly complicates the successful implementation of the NUA.

  • On the whole, UN guidelines were scarcely covered in the reports issued by the examined countries, irrespective of their geographical area. The best performance corresponded to Finland (55.36%), Mongolia (46.43%), and Turkiye (41.07%). Spain (1.79%) had the worst record. No pattern was thus identified to correlate the level of guidelines coverage with the geographical distribution of countries.

  • No consensus was found in the guidelines handled by the national reports in determining the priority topics to be faced worldwide. Housing was the most referred to, but only for the nations of three zones.

  • Significant differences were identified between the core issues suggested by the items of the UN report form, the major challenges defined by each country in the SDG index report, and the SDGs associated with the guidelines covered by the national reports. This proves the current inconsistency between the NUA and the SDG index, the composite metric specifically developed to assess and monitor the performance of nations on the SDGs.

Consequently, the UN report template is seriously questioned as an effective tool to assist in the application of the NUA. On the basis of the successful monitoring and assessment process used for the SDGs, the next recommendations are suggested to enhance the implementation of the NUA: (i) definition of quantitative indicators for monitoring, (ii) establishing a ranking of countries' performance, (iii) capitalizing on the SDGs experience, and (iv) use of the English as the sole reporting language.

The main limitation of this study is the theoretical nature of the NUA, which hinders the accurate evaluation and monitoring of its implementation. For that reason, the report template developed to this end presents serious flaws as the lack of tracking metrics that undermine its value as an efficient instrument toward the NUA. Besides, the absence of historical data and the reduced commitment of countries on reporting are also additional constraints encountered. New lines of investigation put the focus on addressing prior issues by defining a comprehensive suite of representative metrics to monitor the achievement of the guidelines defined in the reporting form. Furthermore, additional guidelines to increase the representation of the SDGs and the four sustainability dimensions are also to be conceived. Lastly, the contribution of the NUA as model to design national policies for urban and regional planning might be a subject of future research.

Data

The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author (J.M.D.-S.), upon reasonable request.

Acknowledgments

The authors appreciate the support of Dr. Ng Theam Foo from the Centre for Global Sustainability Studies at the Universiti Sains Malaysia.

Author contributions

Concept and design: J.M.D.-S.; analysis and interpretation of the data: J.M.D.-S.; drafting of the paper: J.M.D.-S.; critical review for intellectual content: J.M.D.-S.; final approval of the version to be published: J.M.D.-S. and J.L.S. All authors agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work.

Financial support

This study was funded by the Ministry of Universities of Spain, grant number No. MU-21 UP2021-030 13774398.

Competing interests

None.

Appendix

Table A1. Guidelines for reporting on the implementation of the NUA (Urban Agenda Platform, 2024)

Footnotes

a Suitable guidelines for being quantitatively assessed using indicators.

References

Acuto, M., & Parnell, S. (2016). Leave no city behind. Science (New York, N.Y.), 352, 873. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aag1385CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Alfaro d'Alençon, P., Smith, H., Eva Álvarez de Andrés, E., Cabrera, C., Fokdal, J., Lombard, M., Mazzolini, A., Michelutti, E., Moretto, L., & Spire, A. (2018). Interrogating informality: Conceptualizations, practices and policies in the light of the New Urban Agenda. Habitat International, 75, 5966. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.habitatint.2018.04.007CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alkema, L., Jones, G. W., & Lai, C. U. R. (2013). Levels of urbanization in the world's countries: Testing consistency of estimates based on national definitions. Journal of Population Research, 30, 291304. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12546-013-9109-xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arslan, T. V., Durak, S., & Aytac, D. O. (2016). Attaining SDG11: Can sustainability assessment tools be used for improved transformation of neighborhoods in historic city centers? Natural Resources Forum, 40, 180202. https://doi.org/10.1111/1477-8947.12115CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bajracharya, B., & Khan, S. (2020). Urban governance in Australia: A case study of Brisbane City. In Dahiya, B., & Das, A. (Eds.), New Urban Agenda in Asia-Pacific. Advances in 21st century human settlements (pp. 225250). Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-6709-0_8Google Scholar
Bandauko, E., Annan-Aggrey, E., & Arku, G. (2021). Planning and managing urbanization in the twenty-first century: Content analysis of selected African countries’ national urban policies. Urban Research and Practice, 14(1), 94104. https://doi.org/10.1080/17535069.2020.1803641CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bridges, A. (2016). The role of institutions in sustainable urban governance. Natural Resources Forum, 40, 169179. https://doi.org/10.1111/1477-8947.12116CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caprotti, F., Cowley, R., Datta, A., Broto, V. C., Gao, E., Georgeson, L., Herrick, C., Odendaal, N., & Joss, S. (2017). The New Urban Agenda: Key opportunities and challenges for policy and practice. Urban Research and Practice, 10(3), 367378. https://doi.org/10.1080/17535069.2016.1275618CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cartwright, A., Palmer, I., Taylor, A., Pieterse, E., Parnell, S., & Colenbrander, S. (2018). Developing prosperous and inclusive cities in Africa-National Urban Policies to the rescue? Coalition for urban transitions. London and Washington, DC. Retrieved from https://newclimateeconomy.net/content/developing-prosperous-and-inclusive-cities-africa-national-urban-policies-rescueGoogle Scholar
CNU, Congress of New Urbanism. (2024). The Charter of the New Urbanism. Retrieved from https://www.cnu.org/who-we-are/charter-new-urbanismGoogle Scholar
Cociña, C., Frediani, A., Acuto, M., & Levy, C. (2019). Knowledge translation in global urban agendas: A history of research-practice encounters in the Habitat conferences. World Development, 122, 130141. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2019.05.014CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corbett, J., & Mellouli, S. (2017). Winning the SDG battle in cities: How an integrated information ecosystem can contribute to the achievement of the 2030 sustainable development goals. Information Systems Journal, 27, 427461. https://doi.org/10.1111/isj.12138CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dahiya, B., & Das, A. (2020). New Urban Agenda in Asia-Pacific: Governance for sustainable and inclusive cities. In Dahiya, B., & Das, A. (Eds.), New Urban Agenda in Asia-Pacific. Advances in 21st century human settlements (pp. 336). Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-6709-0_1Google Scholar
Diaz-Sarachaga, J. M. (2019). Analysis of the local agenda 21 in Madrid compared with other global actions in sustainable development. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(19), 3685. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16193685CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Diaz-Sarachaga, J. M., Jato-Espino, D., & Castro-Fresno, D. (2018). Is the sustainable development goals (SDG) index an adequate framework to measure the progress of the 2030 Agenda? Sustainable Development, 26(6), 663671. https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.1735CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dovey, K., & Ristic, M. (2017). Mapping urban assemblages: The production of spatial knowledge. Journal of Urbanism: International Research on Placemaking and Urban Sustainability, 10(1), 1528. https://doi.org/10.1080/17549175.2015.1112298Google Scholar
García-Peña, C., González-Medina, M., & Diaz-Sarachaga, J. M. (2021). Assessment of the governance dimension in the frame of the 2030 Agenda: Evidence from 100 Spanish cities. Sustainability, 13(10), 5519. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13105519CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gubic, I., & Baloi, O. (2019). Implementing the New Urban Agenda in Rwanda: Nation-wide public space initiatives. Urban Planning, 4(2), 223236. https://doi.org/10.17645/up.v4i2.2005CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haase, D., Güneralp, B., Dahiya, B., Bai, X., & Elmqvist, T. (2018). Global urbanization: Perspectives and trends. In Elmqvist, T., Bai, X., Frantzeskaki, N., Griffith, C., Maddox, D., McPhearson, T., Parnell, S., Romero-Lankao, P., Simon, D., & Watkins, M. (Eds.), Urban planet: Knowledge towards sustainable cities (pp. 1944). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316647554.003CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hague, C. (2018). Delivering the New Urban Agenda through urban and territorial planning. Planning Theory & Practice, 19(4), 618622. https://doi.org/10.1080/14649357.2018.1499464CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hohmann, R. P. (2017). National urban policies: A policy lever to foster a New Urban Agenda?. Raum Planung, 193(5), 3643.Google Scholar
Khalid, A. M., Sharma, S., & Dubey, A. K. (2018). Developing an indicator set for measuring sustainable development in India. Natural Resources Forum, 42, 185200. https://doi.org/10.1111/1477-8947.12151CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kitchin, R., Lauriault, T. P., & McArdle, G. (2015). Knowing and governing cities through urban indicators, city benchmarking and real-time dashboards. Regional Studies, Regional Science, 2(1), 628. https://doi.org/10.1080/21681376.2014.983149CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klopp, J. M., & Petretta, D. L. (2017). The urban sustainable development goal: Indicators, complexity and the politics of measuring cities. Cities (London, England), 63, 9297. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2016.12.019Google Scholar
Krellenberg, K., Bergsträßer, H., Bykova, D., Kress, N., & Tyndall, K. (2019). Urban sustainability strategies guided by the SDGs – A tale of four cities. Sustainability, 11(4), 1116. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11041116CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leck, H., & Simon, D. (2018). Local authority responses to climate change in South Africa: The challenges of transboundary governance. Sustainability, 10(7), 2542. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072542CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lefebvre, H. (1968). Le droit à la ville. Paris: Éditions Anthropos.Google Scholar
Mahadevia, D., & Lathia, S. (2019). Women's safety and public spaces: Lessons from the Sabarmati Riverfront, India. Urban Planning, 4(2), 154168. https://doi.org/10.17645/up.v4i2.2049CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGranahan, G., Schensul, D., & Singh, G. (2016). Inclusive urbanization: Can the 2030 Agenda be delivered without it? Environment and Urbanization, 28(1), 1334. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956247815627522CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McPhearson, T., Parnell, S., Simon, D., Gaffney, O., Elmqvist, T., Bai, X., Roberts, D., & Revi, A. (2016). Scientists must have a say in the future of cities. Nature News, 538, 165166. https://doi.org/10.1038/538165aCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mehaffy, M. W., Haas, T., & Elmlund, P. (2019). Public space in the New Urban Agenda: Research into implementation. Urban Planning, 4(2), 134137. https://doi.org/10.17645/up.v4i2.2293CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moser, C. O. N. (2017). Gender transformation in a new global urban agenda: Challenges for Habitat III and beyond. Environment and Urbanization, 29(1), 221236. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956247816662573CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mycoo, M. A. (2017). A Caribbean New Urban Agenda post-Habitat III: Closing the gaps. Habitat International, 69, 6877. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.habitatint.2017.09.001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mycoo, M. A., & Bharath, K. (2021). Sustainable development goal 11 and a new urban agenda for Caribbean small Island developing states: Policy, practice, and action. Frontiers in Sustainable Cities, 3, 554377. https://doi.org/10.3389/frsc.2021.554377CrossRefGoogle Scholar
OECD, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. (2016). The state of National Urban Policy in OECD countries; A special report prepared for the United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development (Habitat III). OECD, Paris.Google Scholar
Okraszewska, R., Romanowska, A., Wołek, M., Oskarbski, J., Birr, K., & Jamroz, K. (2018). Integration of a multilevel transport system model into sustainable urban mobility planning. Sustainability, 10(2), 479. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10020479CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Okraszewska, R., Jamroz, K., Michalski, L., Zukowska, J., Grzelec, K., & Birr, K. (2019). Analysing ways to achieve a New Urban Agenda-based sustainable metropolitan transport. Sustainability, 11(3), 813. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11030813CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parnell, S. (2016). Defining a global urban development agenda. World Development, 78, 529540. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2015.10.028CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patterson, A. (2020). Sidelining sustainable development: Structural constraints on the implementation of the New Urban Agenda in the UK. In Nunes Silva, C., & Trono, A. (Eds.), Local governance in the New Urban Agenda. Local and Urban Governance (pp. 255273). Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-47135-4_13CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Privitera, D. (2020). Sustainable urban mobility and local governance practices: The case of cycling in Italian cities. In Nunes Silva, C., & Trono, A. (Eds.), Local governance in the New Urban Agenda. Local and Urban Governance (pp. 335348). Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-47135-4_17CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pucher, J., & Buehler, R. (2017). Cycling towards a more sustainable transport future. Transport Reviews, 37(6), 689694. https://doi.org/10.1080/01441647.2017.1340234CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robin, E., Steenmans, K., & Acuto, M. (2019). Harnessing inclusive urban knowledge for the implementation of the New Urban Agenda. Urban Research and Practice, 12(2), 137155. https://doi.org/10.1080/17535069.2017.1414870CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salim, W., & Hudalah, D. (2020). Urban governance challenges and reforms in Indonesia: Towards a New Urban Agenda. In Dahiya, B., & Das, A. (Eds.), New Urban Agenda in Asia-Pacific. Advances in 21st century human settlements (pp. 163181). Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-6709-0_6Google Scholar
Satterthwaite, D. (2016). A New Urban Agenda? Environment and Urbanization, 28(1), 312. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956247816637501CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schindler, S. (2017). The New Urban Agenda in an era of unprecedented global challenges. International Development Planning Review, 39(4), 349354. https://doi.org/10.3828/idpr.2017.15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
SDSN, Sustainable Development Solutions Network. (2020). Sustainable Development Report 2020. https://sdgtransformationcenter.org/reports/sustainable-development-report-2020Google Scholar
SDSN, Sustainable Development Solutions Network. (2021). Sustainable Development Report 2021. https://sdgtransformationcenter.org/reports/sustainable-development-report-2021Google Scholar
SDSN, Sustainable Development Solutions Network. (2022). Sustainable Development Report 2022. https://www.sustainabledevelopment.report/reports/sustainable-development-report-2022/Google Scholar
SDSN, Sustainable Development Solutions Network. (2023). Sustainable Development Report 2023. https://dashboards.sdgindex.org/rankingsGoogle Scholar
Sietchiping, R., & Omwamba, J. (2020). The future of urban policy in Africa. Localization of SDG 11 and the New Urban Agenda. In Nunes Silva, C., & Trono, A. (Eds.), Local governance in the New Urban Agenda. Local and Urban Governance (pp. 275291). Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-47135-4_14CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silva, C.N. (2020). Decentralization and the New Urban Agenda: The case of Angola. In Nunes Silva, C., & Trono, A. (Eds.), Local governance in the New Urban Agenda. Local and Urban Governance (pp. 1545). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-47135-4_2CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simon, D., Arfvidsson, H., Anand, G., Bazaz, A., Fenna, G., Foster, K., Jain, G., Hansson, S., Evans, L. M., Moodley, N., Nyambuga, C., Oloko, M., Ombara, D. C., Patel, Z., Perry, B., Primo, N., Revi, A., Van Niekerk, B., Wharton, A., & Wright, C. (2016). Developing and testing the urban sustainable development goal's targets and indicators – A five-city study. Environment and Urbanization, 28(1), 4963. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956247815619865CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turok, I., & Parnell, S. (2009). Reshaping cities, rebuilding nations: The role of national urban policies. Urban Forum, 20(2), 157174. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12132-009-9060-2CrossRefGoogle Scholar
UN- Habitat, United Nations Habitat. (2016). Guidelines for reporting the implementation of the New Urban Agenda. https://www.urbanagendaplatform.org/sites/default/files/2020-07/New%20Urban%20Agenda%20Reporting.Guidelines.30-10-2019_Final.pdfGoogle Scholar
UNSTATS, United Nations Statistics Division. (2024). Regional groupings used in Report and Statistical Annex. https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/indicators/regional-groups/Google Scholar
UN, United Nations. (1976). United Nations Conference on Human Settlements – Habitat I. https://www.un.org/en/conferences/habitat/vancouver1976Google Scholar
UN, United Nations. (1996). United Nations Conference on Human Settlements – Habitat II. https://www.un.org/en/conferences/habitat/istanbul1996Google Scholar
UN, United Nations. (2015). Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. https://sdgs.un.org/2030agendaGoogle Scholar
UN, United Nations. (2016a). The New Urban Agenda. https://habitat3.org/the-new-urban-agenda/Google Scholar
UN, United Nations. (2016b). UN Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development: Habitat III. https://www.un.org/en/conferences/habitat/quito2016Google Scholar
Urban Agenda Platform. (2024). Guidelines for Reporting on the Implementation of the New Urban Agenda. Retrieved from https://www.urbanagendaplatform.org/sites/default/files/2020-07/New%20Urban%20Agenda%20Reporting.Guidelines.30-10-2019_Final.pdfGoogle Scholar
Vaidya, H., & Chatterji, T. (2020). SDG 11 Sustainable cities and communities. In Franco, I., Chatterji, T., Derbyshire, E., & Tracey, J. (Eds.), Actioning the global goals for local impact. Science for sustainable societies (pp. 173185). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-32-9927-6_12CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Valencia, S. C., Simon, D., Croese, S., Nordqvist, J., Oloko, M., Sharma, T., … Versace, I. (2019). Adapting the sustainable development goals and the New Urban Agenda to the city level: Initial reflections from a comparative research project. International Journal of Urban Sustainable Development, 11(1), 423. https://doi.org/10.1080/19463138.2019.1573172CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Noorloos, F., & Kloosterboer, M. (2018). Africa's new cities: The contested future of urbanization. Urban Studies, 55(6), 12231241. https://doi.org/10.1177/0042098017700574CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, V. (2021). The return of the city-region in the New Urban Agenda: Is this relevant in the Global South? Regional Studies, 55(1), 1928. https://doi.org/10.1080/00343404.2019.1664734CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Methodological approach.Source: Authors.

Figure 1

Table 1. Sustainable development goals

Figure 2

Table 2. Coding of UN guidelines

Figure 3

Figure 2. Regional distribution of nations reporting the implementation status of the NUA.Source: Authors.

Figure 4

Figure 3. Sharing of the UN guidelines by SDG and sustainability domain.Source: Authors.

Figure 5

Figure 4. Guidelines deemed by country in Europe and Northern America (a) and OECD (b).Source: Authors.

Figure 6

Figure 5. Distribution of guidelines by nation of Northern Africa and Western Asia (a) and sub-Saharan Africa (b).Source: Authors.

Figure 7

Figure 6. Guidelines shared among countries in Eastern and South-Eastern Asia (a) and Latin America and the Caribbean (b).Source: Authors.

Figure 8

Table 3. SDG index ranking of countries in 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023

Figure 9

Table 4. SDGs represented in the national reports of the NUA status

Figure 10

Table 5. Major challenges established in the SDG index report

Figure 11

Table A1. Guidelines for reporting on the implementation of the NUA (Urban Agenda Platform, 2024)