‘How Cities Will Save the World’ Book Reading and Discussion at Georgia State College of Law

Staff Report From Metro Atlanta CEO

Friday, August 26th, 2016

The Center for the Comparative Study of Metropolitan Growth at Georgia State University College of Law will hold a reading, discussion and reception at 4 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 8, to celebrate the publication of “How Cities Will Save the World: Urban Innovation in the Face of Population Flows, Climate Change and Economic Inequality,” a book co-edited by John Travis Marshall, assistant professor of law.
 
The event will be held in the Marjorie and Ralph Knowles Conference Center in the College of Law, 85 Park Place NE, Atlanta.
 
Ray Brescia, co-editor of the book and associate professor at Albany Law School in Albany, New York, will take part in the celebration. Julian Juergensmeyer, center director and the Ben F. Johnson Jr. Chair in Law, and Ryan Rowberry, associate director and associate professor of law, contributed chapters to the book.
 
“How Cities Will Save the World” examines challenges to communities such as climate change, population shifts and economic inequality, and provides recommendations for responding to these critical problems. These issues are core concerns for cities because they “are destructive and disruptive,” Brescia said.
 
“The urban ruins left in the wake of Hurricane Sandy, the hemorrhaging of Detroit’s population and the vacant properties that litter cityscapes in the wake of the mortgage foreclosure crisis are just a few examples,” Marshall said. “We cannot escape the tragic stories and statistics that document a widening economic and achievement gap between low-income and upper-income families. The stakes are growing.”
 
The challenges are so significant and fundamental that they demand new approaches — large and small — in how cities engage in local governance, Marshall said.
 
Cities are often viewed as passive participants to state and national efforts to resolve challenging urban issues, but evidence suggests otherwise. It’s often up to the local officials to devise innovative policy solutions and approaches to disaster recovery and mitigation where existing laws have provided little guidance. It is at the local level where effective policies have the best chance for success, Marshall said.
 
“Like many countries today, national leaders in the United States are caught in a political deadlock, swaying between austerity budgets and tax cuts, and not being able to pass meaningful legislation,” Brescia said. “Yet, despite this, pragmatic urban officials are exploring effective innovations and are doing more with less, simply out of necessity. Cities are the testing ground and locus of solutions to the problems of this century and the centuries to come, so it is to cities that we must turn for insight. Cities have played – or could play – a critical role as problem solvers for the toughest problems facing this nation and other nations.”
 
More than 50 percent of the world’s population live in urban areas — and that’s expected to increase to about 70 percent by 2050. Recognizing the problems such rapid growth brings, the Rockefeller Foundation established the 100 Resilient Cities Network, an international group of cities that are preparing to face crises of the 21st century. Atlanta was invited to join in May, providing city officials with access to tools, funding, technical expertise and other resources to build resilience to the challenges of a rapidly growing urban metropolis, including deficits in preparedness and recovery from natural and man-made disasters.
 
“Severe storms can shut down vital systems like roads and utilities,” Marshall said. “They also expose ways in which a city functions poorly, including whether it is supported by weak legal and regulatory frameworks. One important step cities can take to prepare for storms is to identify laws or legal vulnerabilities that impede post-storm recovery. Deficient compliance with existing law, or code provisions that do not reflect current storm threats, can seriously hinder rebuilding efforts after disasters strike.
 
“Laws are critical instruments that can bolster or hamper communities' resilience against natural disasters.”
 
“How Cities Will Save the World” presents concrete solutions cities can adopt, serving as a guide for policymakers, urban planners, elected officials and citizens who wish to confront some of the world’s greatest challenges. Each of its 13 chapters are written by experts with front-line experience in city redevelopment, urban infrastructure, health care, planning, immigration, historic preservation and local government administration.
 
Marshall is the associate director of the Center for the Comparative Study of Metropolitan Growth.