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Race to Resilience | Jakarta | Why is inclusive design crucial for community resilience?
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Hosting city: Jakarta (2 November 2022)
People who contribute the least to climate change are often affected the most. An estimated 68 to 135 million people could be pushed into poverty by 2030 because of climate change, and reduced inequality between countries could also rise again.
In Indonesia, rapid urbanisation sets to intensify challenges such as a widening rich-poor divide, disaster risk and pollution. Navigating through these challenges towards sustainable development requires deliberate focus on vulnerable communities to reduce inequality and enable cities to thrive.
In this session, we explore how participatory low-carbon design and planning approaches can be used to uncover opportunities and concrete actions in enhancing access to services, employment and education for equitable economic growth for Indonesia and how this links its path to become net zero by 2060.
People who contribute the least to climate change are often affected the most. An estimated 68 to 135 million people could be pushed into poverty by 2030 because of climate change, and reduced inequality between countries could also rise again.
In Indonesia, rapid urbanisation sets to intensify challenges such as a widening rich-poor divide, disaster risk and pollution. Navigating through these challenges towards sustainable development requires deliberate focus on vulnerable communities to reduce inequality and enable cities to thrive.
In this session, we explore how participatory low-carbon design and planning approaches can be used to uncover opportunities and concrete actions in enhancing access to services, employment and education for equitable economic growth for Indonesia and how this links its path to become net zero by 2060.