The Charter of the United Nations doesn't mention territorial planning and spatial development among its responsibilities. That's the reason why the new guidance paper might be the first such note ever issued by the Committee of Experts on Public Administration (CEPA) which is a subsidiary body of Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), one of the 6 principal organs of the United Nations System established by the UN Charter in 1945.
The new guidance note doesn't diminish the work of UN-Habitat and other UN agencies in relation to urban and territorial planning and the development of the New urban Agenda of 2016. Instead, the publication acknowledges the growing importance of goals like SDG11 to make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable.
Having worked at the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA) as senior advisor from 2008-2013 and supported the work of CEPA I recall that at the time no real attention was paid to urban, regional and rural planning. As a matter of fact, in preparation of the 2030 Agenda stakeholders from development agencies and city networks searched in vain for a unit at the UN Headquarters in New York that would be in charge of urban and territorial affairs. In those days this subject was almost exclusively affiliated with UN-Habitat in Nairobi and thus, of the screen in New York. This changed with the 2030 Agenda and its Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) who foster the understanding that a more integrated planning and use of the territory is needed. And since the territory is the stage where almost all economic, social, environmental and political development leave their physical footprint the need to think and act in support of a coordinated urban and territorial development became common knowledge.
Before CEPA had developed with support of the UN DESA a set of principles of effective governance for sustainable development. The essential purpose of these voluntary principles is to provide interested countries with practical, expert guidance on a broad range of governance challenges associated with the implementation of the 2030 Agenda. CEPA has identified 62 commonly used strategies to assist with the operationalisation of these principles. The new guidance published in December 2021 addresses long-term territorial planning and spatial development in association with the principle of intergenerational equity. CEPA underscores that planning can contribute to strengthening the inclusiveness of institutions. It is part of a series of such notes prepared by renowned experts under the overall direction of the CEPA Secretariat in the Division for Public Institutions and Digital Government of the UN DESA.
The strategy guidance note was authored by Frank J. D’hondt (Director Territorial Capital Institute and Secretary-General of the International Society of City and Regional Planners). During its preparation, consultations were carried out with the following international experts: Cliff Hague (Emeritus Professor of Spatial Planning, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh and former President of Royal Town Planning Institute and Commonwealth Association of Planners), Elisabeth Belpaire (Vice President of ISOCARP), Juanee Cilliers (Planning Professor, University of Sydney), Ulrich Graute (member of the Scientific Committee of ISOCARP), Marco Kamiya (UNIDO), Reza Pourvaziry (Urban Economy Forum), Remy Sietchiping (UN-Habitat), Thomas George, Soumen Bagchi and Han Yang (UNICEF).
Link to the CEPA strategy guidance note
https://publicadministration.un.org/Portals/1/Strategy%20note%20territorial%20planning%20and%20spatial%20development%2010-02.pdf
Committee of Experts on Public Administration
https://publicadministration.un.org/en/CEPA
So also Ulrich's much viewed post on the first anniversary of this blog
http://ugraute.de/first-anniversary-of-the-blog