The Model’s Limitations What ‘Urban Sustainability’ for Port-au-Prince? European urban projects put to the test by the Haitian city
In 2010, the capital of Haiti was devastated by an earthquake that seemed to provide the opportunity for the country, as well as foreign donors, to put Port-au-Prince on the track of an ordered, planned urban policy, in line with its multi-risk context. Prior to the earthquake, the lack of a legal f...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European spatial research and policy 2013-12, Vol.20 (2), p.41-56 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In 2010, the capital of Haiti was devastated by an earthquake that seemed to provide
the opportunity for the country, as well as foreign donors, to put Port-au-Prince on the track of an
ordered, planned urban policy, in line with its multi-risk context. Prior to the earthquake, the lack
of a legal framework for urban planning was called into question. In its wake, speeches making the
capital the emblem of a new ‘sustainable’ start have flourished. The European Union, the main donor
of funds for Haiti, has embarked on a programme of support for reconstruction, but with what results
three years later? The paper proposes to approach the limitations of the ‘sustainable city’ model,
conditioned by spatiotemporal continuity. The systemic functioning underlying urban sustainability
clashes with the context of Port-au-Prince, where spatial division and temporal discontinuity are
determinant. In spite of itself, aid and its operation by projects, seems to enforce urban fragmentation
and dissonance. |
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ISSN: | 1896-1525 1231-1952 1896-1525 |
DOI: | 10.2478/esrp-2013-0010 |