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Cities Alliance has published its Annual Report for 2016, which highlights a truly exceptional year for the organisation with achievements in many areas – programmes, partnerships, global advocacy, and governance.

Country Programmes

On a programmatic level, 2016 marked the completion of five groundbreaking Country Programmes financed by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation that transformed the Cities Alliance’s approach to promoting longer-term, more effective development.

At the same time, the new Liberia Country Programme has taken off and is already making noteworthy progress. Its 2016 activities focused heavily on building an urban poor federation in Monrovia – a nascent slum dweller federation has been established and is developing closer ties with city officials, who are beginning to depend on data collected by slum dwellers to make cases for issues in the city. City officials are accepting the federation as a medium for discussions between slum settlements and city governments, and township commissioners and the profiling team are working together to organise town hall meetings with community leaders.

Future Cities Africa

It was also the final year for our Future Cities Africa programme, undertaken with funding from the UK Department for International Development (DFID). Future Cities Africa has equipped the partnership with a proven approach, rigorous analysis, and a set of relevant tools that can help support African cities to manage urban growth in a way that enables social inclusivity, economic growth and effective mitigation and adaptation against climate change. Its outputs included a feasibility study, critical research, digital tools, and innovative studies and tools.

The programme also informed a highly successful Cities Alliance Africa Strategy workshop in September 2016.

Joint Work Programmes

Our Joint Work Programmes (JWP) helped focus the partnership’s activities around key strategic areas: Equitable Economic Growth, Gender Equality, Resilient Cities, and the New Urban Agenda.

The Equitable Economic Growth JWP devoted its first year to exploring and mobilising support for its fundamental mission and approach: To foster equitable economic growth through improved access to public goods and services in cities. It held a Global Policy Dialogue, produced knowledge products, and kicked off its Equitable Economic Growth City Campaign, in which JWP work with campaign cities on local initiatives.

The JWP for Habitat III culminated nearly three years of work crafting and delivering a common set of priority messages to influence the Post 2015 and New Urban Agenda. A survey conducted among members found the JWP to be a great success, crystallised in the clear and unambiguous recognition of the role of cities in development at the Third United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development (Habitat III) in Quito and in the adoption of the New Urban Agenda.

The Gender JWP was also heavily engaged in influencing the New Urban Agenda. It organised and participated in in numerous activities and dialogues to help ensure that gender was embedded in the New Urban Agenda, including Expert Group Meetings to provide feedback on the various agenda drafts.

The Resilient Cities JWP had a strong 2016. It engaged in three major new projects and participated in global international events, including Habitat III and COP22, to highlight the importance of city resilience. In September, it welcomed the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) from London, bringing total membership to 16 members, five observers and two knowledge partners, and broadening the Cities Alliance’s partnership engagement.

Governance Reforms

At the Corporate level, 2016 saw the outcome of the governance reforms initiated following the Cities Alliance’s move to Brussels and to the UNOPS platform. The Cities Alliance Assembly held its inaugural meeting in Brussels in April, resulting in the appointment of a new governing body that will lead and shape the Cities Alliance for the next three years.

Highlights of the Assembly included the election of Mayor of Dakar Khalifa Sall as President, and The Right Honourable Clare Short, United Kingdom’s former Secretary of State for International Development, as Chair of the 12-member Management Board.

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