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Policy Commitments for Social Equity

Part 2: Overarching Social Equity Consideration

Addressing social equity issues may require measures that compensate for historical disadvantages of marginalized or vulnerable groups.

Steps to inclusive and equitable climate policy. Image adapted from: C40 Inclusive Planning Executive Guide

o this end, green policies can include equity goals and policy commitments that are:

  • Transparent: Equity goals that clearly designed to communicate the objectives, costs, and benefits of the policies or programs to all stakeholders, including local communities.
  • Inclusive: Equity goals that promote equitable sharing of costs and benefits and seek to engage with communities in the planning and implementation processes.
  • Evidence-based: Equity goals that target specific needs of communities and can be informed by gender and social assessments, and include tracking whether the policies or programs meet those needs.5, 6, 7

C40 Climate Action Planning Resource Centre provides additional resources and check-lists on designing equitable and inclusive policies.

National Recreation and Park Association of the United States, only 40% of U.S. park and recreation agencies have a formal inclusion policy or goal. Portland, Oregon’s Urban Forest Management Plan 2003 explicitly includes spatial equity as one of its key goals and recognizes that “The urban forestry is unevenly distributed. Economically disadvantaged neighborhoods often have fewer trees than more wealthy areas.”

Resources

Investing in Equitable Urban Park Systems | Urban Institute, 2019

Parks for Inclusion Policy Guide | Initiatives According to National Recreation and Park Association

Climate Action Planning Resource Centre | C40, 2019

Equity Tool Kit | | 11th Street Bridge Park, n.d.