@misc{36804,
title = {Accommodating Urban Growth in Latin American and Caribbean Cities},
author = {Angel, Shlomo and Arcia, Diego and Sordi, Jeannette and Paiva, Julia De Souza Campos and Serra, Olivia and Vera, Felipe and De Christo, Pedro Henrique and Furtado, Martim and Herrera Montes, Salvador and Hobbs, Jason and Lee, Hyuna and Maleronka, Camila and Martinez, Pablo and Olivares, Daniela and Park, Hye Jung and Romero Lopez, Tania and Santamaria, Mar},
year = {2025},
doi = {10.18235/0013550},
abstract = {“Accommodating Urban Growth in Latin American and Caribbean Cities” is the result of a collaboration between the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and New York University, initiated in 2021 with the support of the Korean Government and the Korean Research Institute for Human Settlements. The main goal of the initiative, and the resulting publication, is to enhance the capacity of national and sub-national governments in Latin America and the Caribbean to implement effective territorial planning in response to projected urban growth from 2020 to 2050. Although territorial planning has historically prepared land for urban development and improved existing neighborhoods, it has struggled to keep pace with rapid urbanization, resulting in poorly planned areas, inadequate protection of natural resources, and insufficient resilience against climate risks. 
The book is organized in three sections. The first section present the results of the study conducted by Prof. Shlomo Angels and the Marron Institute for Urbanization at New York University. The study investigates how cities can accommodate new urban populations and elevate the standard of living of current dwellers through a new conceptual framework. The section introduces examples of international best practices in accommodating urban growth and reviews the emerging empirical evidence gathered in 70 cities for territorial planning in the LAC Region. The second section is the Atlas of the seventy cities. A series of maps, graphs, and data portray the anatomy of density of cities in the region through 3 or 7 parameters that allow to depict their transformation over the past four decades and project their potential for future growth. Campo Grande, Merida, and San Salvador are presented as case studies. Finally, the third section presents a series of strategies to plan for urban growth: guidelines for urban expansion and densification, new frameworks for sustainability, and emerging technologies.},
url = {https://doi.org/10.18235/0013550}
}
