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	<title>IAHH: International Association of Humane Habitat &#187; Issues</title>
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		<title>Architects and Ekisticians for Peace In The Middle East</title>
		<link>http://humanehabitat.org/architects-and-ekisticians-for-peace-in-the-middle-east/</link>
		<comments>http://humanehabitat.org/architects-and-ekisticians-for-peace-in-the-middle-east/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Aug 2006 05:11:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>arzan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Sign a petition calling for a ceasefire in the Middle East, urging all the political leaders to search for a lasting peace.
The following is a message from Prof. Akhtar Chauhan. 
ARCHITECTS AND EKISTICIANS FOR PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST
There is a need for long term and permanent solution to the issues, which mere ceasefire is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="http://www.ceasefirecampaign.org"><em>Sign a petition</em></a></strong><em> calling for a ceasefire in the Middle East, urging all the political leaders to search for a lasting peace.</em></p>
<p>The following is a message from <strong>Prof. Akhtar Chauhan. </strong></p>
<p>ARCHITECTS AND EKISTICIANS FOR PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST</p>
<p>There is a need for long term and permanent solution to the issues, which mere ceasefire is not going to solve. I am a strong believer in finding creative solutions to the issues. The problem has arisen due to artificial creation of nations at the end of World War II by the victors. Since then thousands have died and millions have suffered due to on going conflicts in the Middle East.</p>
<p>The forces of peace need to unite and find creative and acceptable solutions to the issues. We do not have much time. We are on the verge of a conflict that may grow into World War III if the forces of peace do not act urgently and decisively.</p>
<p>One of the solutions lies in a regional collaborative framework, which  encompasses Palestine, Israel and Lebanon. All the three religions Judaism, Christianity  and Islam, preach good neighbourliness, love and care for fellow human beings and prohibit violence and killing of any innocent human being.</p>
<p>Based on this common understanding there is a need to go beyond the nation statesand work out an out of the box solution in the regional co-operation or a confederation of nations with an economic union. Let people of all faiths live together in peace and let there not be any further violence and killing of innocent children, women, men, elders and animals. We call for immediate ceasefire leading to a permanent peace.</p>
<p>It is upto us the forces of peace to press for it successfully before the  forces of violence turn the world into one living hell. We need to spread the good ideas for permanent solution to the crisis in the Middle East. From the Architects and Ekisticians for Peace to the Citizens for Peace, Now! Spread the good idea among your friends, today!</p>
<p>It may seem like a dream to many but I am convinced that that is the way out, the permanent solution, which will please the Almighty Allah. May Allah bless the people of the world with peace, harmony and sustainable development. Ameen.</p>
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		<title>Istanbul Declaration on Human Settlements</title>
		<link>http://humanehabitat.org/istanbul-declaration-on-human-settlements-2/</link>
		<comments>http://humanehabitat.org/istanbul-declaration-on-human-settlements-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 May 2006 01:47:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>arzan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[1. We, the Heads of State or Government and the official delegations of countries assembled at the United Nations Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat II) in Istanbul, Turkey from 3 to 14 June 1996, take this opportunity to endorse the universal goals of ensuring adequate shelter for all and making human settlements safer, healthier and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>1. We, the Heads of State or Government and the official delegations of countries assembled at the United Nations Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat II) in Istanbul, Turkey from 3 to 14 June 1996, take this opportunity to endorse the universal goals of ensuring adequate shelter for all and making human settlements safer, healthier and more liveable, equitable, sustainable and productive. Our deliberations on the two major themes of the Conference &#8211; adequate shelter for all and sustainable human settlements development in an urbanizing world &#8211; have been inspired by the Charter of the United Nations and are aimed at reaffirming existing and forging new partnerships for action at the international, national and local levels to improve our living environment. We commit ourselves to the objectives, principles and recommendations contained in the Habitat Agenda and pledge our mutual support for its implementation.</p>
<p>2. We have considered, with a sense of urgency, the continuing deterioration of conditions of shelter and human settlements. At the same time, we recognize cities and towns as centres of civilization, generating economic development and social, cultural, spiritual and scientific advancement. We must take advantage of the opportunities presented by our settlements and preserve their diversity to promote solidarity among all our peoples.</p>
<p><span id="more-32"></span></p>
<p>3. We reaffirm our commitment to better standards of living in larger freedom for all humankind. We recall the first United Nations Conference on Human Settlements, held at Vancouver, Canada, the celebration of the International Year of Shelter for the Homeless and the Global Strategy for Shelter to the Year 2000, all of which have contributed to increased global awareness of the problems of human settlements and called for action to achieve adequate shelter for all. Recent United Nations world conferences, including, in particular, the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, have given us a comprehensive agenda for the equitable attainment of peace, justice and democracy built on economic development, social development and environmental protection as interdependent and mutually reinforcing components of sustainable development. We have sought to integrate the outcomes of these conferences into the Habitat Agenda.</p>
<p>4. To improve the quality of life within human settlements, we must combat the deterioration of conditions that in most cases, particularly in developing countries, have reached crisis proportions. To this end, we must address comprehensively, inter alia, unsustainable consumption and production patterns, particularly in industrialized countries; unsustainable population changes, including changes in structure and distribution, giving priority consideration to the tendency towards excessive population concentration; homelessness; increasing poverty; unemployment; social exclusion; family instability; inadequate resources; lack of basic infrastructure and services; lack of adequate planning; growing insecurity and violence; environmental degradation; and increased vulnerability to disasters.</p>
<p>5. The challenges of human settlements are global, but countries and regions also face specific problems which need specific solutions. We recognize the need to intensify our efforts and cooperation to improve living conditions in the cities, towns and villages throughout the world, particularly in developing countries, where the situation is especially grave, and in countries with economies in transition. In this connection, we acknowledge that globalization of the world economy presents opportunities and challenges for the development process, as well as risks and uncertainties, and that achievement of the goals of the Habitat Agenda would be facilitated by, inter alia, positive actions on the issues of financing of development, external debt, international trade and transfer of technology. Our cities must be places where human beings lead fulfilling lives in dignity, good health, safety, happiness and hope.</p>
<p>6. Rural and urban development are interdependent. In addition to improving the urban habitat, we must also work to extend adequate infrastructure, public services and employment opportunities to rural areas in order to enhance their attractiveness, develop an integrated network of settlements and minimize rural-to-urban migration. Small- and medium-sized towns need special focus.</p>
<p>7. As human beings are at the centre of our concern for sustainable development, they are the basis for our actions as in implementing the Habitat Agenda. We recognize the particular needs of women, children and youth for safe, healthy and secure living conditions. We shall intensify our efforts to eradicate poverty and discrimination, to promote and protect all human rights and fundamental freedoms for all, and to provide for basic needs, such as education, nutrition and life-span health care services, and, especially, adequate shelter for all. To this end, we commit ourselves to improving the living conditions in human settlements in ways that are consonant with local needs and realities, and we acknowledge the need to address the global, economic, social and environmental trends to ensure the creation of better living environments for all people. We shall also ensure the full and equal participation of all women and men, and the effective participation of youth, in political, economic and social life. We shall promote full accessibility for people with disabilities, as well as gender equality in policies, programmes and projects for shelter and sustainable human settlements development. We make these commitments with particular reference to the more than one billion people living in absolute poverty and to the members of vulnerable and disadvantaged groups identified in the Habitat Agenda.</p>
<p>8. We reaffirm our commitment to the full and progressive realization of the right to adequate housing as provided for in international instruments. To that end, we shall seek the active participation of our public, private and non-governmental partners at all levels to ensure legal security of tenure, protection from discrimination and equal access to affordable, adequate housing for all persons and their families.</p>
<p>9. We shall work to expand the supply of affordable housing by enabling markets to perform efficiently and in a socially and environmentally responsible manner, enhancing access to land and credit and assisting those who are unable to participate in housing markets.</p>
<p>10. In order to sustain our global environment and improve the quality of living in our human settlements, we commit ourselves to sustainable patterns of production, consumption, transportation and settlements development; pollution prevention; respect for the carrying capacity of ecosystems; and the preservation of opportunities for future generations. In this connection, we shall cooperate in a spirit of global partnership to conserve, protect and restore the health and integrity of the Earth&#8217;s ecosystem. In view of different contributions to global environmental degradation, we reaffirm the principle that countries have common but differentiated responsibilities. We also recognize that we must take these actions in a manner consistent with the precautionary principle approach, which shall be widely applied according to the capabilities of countries. We shall also promote healthy living environments, especially through the provision of adequate quantities of safe water and effective management of waste.</p>
<p>11. We shall promote the conservation, rehabilitation and maintenance of buildings, monuments, open spaces, landscapes and settlement patterns of historical, cultural, architectural, natural, religious and spiritual value.</p>
<p>12. We adopt the enabling strategy and the principles of partnership and participation as the most democratic and effective approach for the realization of our commitments. Recognizing local authorities as our closest partners, and as essential, in the implementation of the Habitat Agenda, we must, within the legal framework of each country, promote decentralization through democratic local authorities and work to strengthen their financial and institutional capacities in accordance with the conditions of countries, while ensuring their transparency, accountability and responsiveness to the needs of people, which are key requirements for Governments at all levels. We shall also increase our cooperation with parliamentarians, the private sector, labour unions and non-governmental and other civil society organizations with due respect for their autonomy. We shall also enhance the role of women and encourage socially and environmentally responsible corporate investment by the private sector. Local action should be guided and stimulated through local programmes based on Agenda 21, the Habitat Agenda, or any other equivalent programme, as well as drawing upon the experience of worldwide cooperation initiated in Istanbul by the World Assembly of Cities and Local Authorities, without prejudice to national policies, objectives, priorities and programmes. The enabling strategy includes a responsibility for Governments to implement special measures for members of disadvantaged and vulnerable groups when appropriate.</p>
<p>13. As the implementation of the Habitat Agenda will require adequate funding, we must mobilize financial resources at the national and international levels, including new and additional resources from all sources &#8211; multilateral and bilateral, public and private. In this connection, we must facilitate capacity-building and promote the transfer of appropriate technology and know-how. Furthermore, we reiterate the commitments set out in recent United Nations conferences, especially those in Agenda 21 on funding and technology transfer.</p>
<p>14. We believe that the full and effective implementation of the Habitat Agenda will require the strengthening of the role and functions of the United Nations Centre for Human Settlements (Habitat), taking into account the need for the Centre to focus on well-defined and thoroughly developed objectives and strategic issues. To this end, we pledge our support for the successful implementation of the Habitat Agenda and its global plan of action. Regarding the implementation of the Habitat Agenda, we fully recognize the contribution of the regional and national action plans prepared for this Conference.</p>
<p>15. This Conference in Istanbul marks a new era of cooperation, an era of a culture of solidarity. As we move into the twenty-first century, we offer a positive vision of sustainable human settlements, a sense of hope for our common future and an exhortation to join a truly worthwhile and engaging challenge, that of building together a world where everyone can live in a safe home with the promise of a decent life of dignity, good health, safety, happiness and hope.</p>
<p>Original document <a href="http://www.unhabitat.org/unchs/english/hagenda/ist-dec.htm">here</a></p>
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		<title>THE MUMBAI MEMORANDUM</title>
		<link>http://humanehabitat.org/the-mumbai-memorandum/</link>
		<comments>http://humanehabitat.org/the-mumbai-memorandum/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Mar 2006 01:39:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>arzan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Issues]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://humanehabitat.org/?p=10</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE MUMBAI MEMORANDUM
OF THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR HUMANE HABITAT
January 29, 2006
At the conclusion of the 8th International Conference on Humane Habitat, held at Rizvi College of Architecture in Bandra West, Mumbai, the final
Plenary adopted the following Mumbai Memorandum and wish to have it known that:
1. It is a source of great concern to the membership [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="postbody">THE MUMBAI MEMORANDUM<br />
OF THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR HUMANE HABITAT</span></p>
<p>January 29, 2006</p>
<p>At the conclusion of the 8th International Conference on Humane Habitat, held at Rizvi College of Architecture in Bandra West, Mumbai, the final<br />
Plenary adopted the following Mumbai Memorandum and wish to have it known that:</p>
<p>1. It is a source of great concern to the membership of IAHH that, as illustrated by United Nations statistics, the world’s wealth since 1980s is being increasingly concentrated amongst a smaller percentage of the world’s population, while the ranks of the poor and the destitute continue to expand, with entirely inhuman consequences alluded to by indices such as infant mortality per 1,000 live births that are more expressive of a state of barbarism than of civilization. Thus, the preconditions for life are increasingly inhumane and even barbaric and civil society can’t remain silent in the matter.</p>
<p>2. Moreover, except for the wealthy and personally very mobile minority, the habitat available to the majority is increasingly poorly performing, and unsustainable to the point that disasters do occur and are likely to follow in an increasingly recurring pattern of devastation. Thus, our habitat, the very container for life, is increasingly poisonous to the life of the majority and is unsustainable.<br />
3. These seemingly inexorable tendencies continue to be fuelled by rampant globalisation which is leading, in turn, to a universally homogenized model of habitat being inexorably imposed on previously richly diverse habitats reflective of quite varied cultures. Thus, our habitat which for centuries has reflected our respective cultures as repositories of our inheritance and belief is being eroded to the point of destruction.</p>
<p>We call on civil society and the authorities that represent it to take note of these very disturbing realities and we require that they respond with appropriate policies and plans of action that may engender some semblance of hope for the restoration and development of humane habitat in our respective quarters of the world.</p>
<p><span id="more-10"></span></p>
<p>Proposed by Prof. Fabio Todeschini    Seconded by Prof. Akhtar Chauhan</p>
<p>THE MUMBAI MEMORANDUM<br />
OF THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR HUMANE HABITAT</p>
<p>We the following members of the International Association for Humane<br />
Habitat adopt the IAHH Mumbai Memorandum.</p>
<p>1.	Prof. Akhtar Chauhan, India</p>
<p>2.	Dr. Peter Schreibmayer, Austria</p>
<p>3.	Ar. Anil Nagrath, India</p>
<p>4.	Prof. Fabio Todeschini, South Africa</p>
<p>5.	Prof. Ashraf Salama, Egypt</p>
<p>6.	Dr. Parvin Ghaemmaghami, Iran</p>
<p>7.	Dr. Gulam Hosein Mimarian, Iran</p>
<p>8.	Dr. Romeo Carabelli, Italy</p>
<p>9.	Ar. Ludovic Jonard, France</p>
<p>10.	Ar. Jaime Olid, Spain</p>
<p>11.	Prof. Ashiah Ganju, India</p>
<p>12.	Ar. Esmaiel Zarghami, Iran</p>
<p>13.	Ar. Saeed Akbari, Iran</p>
<p>14.	Prof. Pradnya Chauhan, India</p>
<p>15.	Ar. Ceridwen Owen, Australia</p>
<p>16.	Ar. Jamshid Bhiwandiwala, India</p>
<p>17.	Ar. Dhiraj Salhotra, India</p>
<p>18.	Ar. Chakor Mehta, India</p>
<p>19.	Ar. Supriyo Bannerjee, India</p>
<p>20.	Ar. Najma Kasubhai, India</p>
<p>21.            Ar. Jagdeep Desai, India</p>
<p>22.            Prof. V. Pandit, India</p>
<p>23.            Ar. Jagdish Singh, India</p>
<p>24.            Ar. Deepika Shetty, India</p>
<p>25.            Ar. Madhurima Waghmare, India</p>
<p>26.            Ar. Salil Bhatt, India</p>
<p>27.            Ar. Arzan Sam Wadia, India</p>
<p>28.            Ar. Girish Pillai, India</p>
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