Stage 2: Care infrastructure
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Coming soon...

? Care and Youth
Davide Cerella, Kashish Gupta, Alice Lord and Th¨¦o Mureau (Sciences Po Paris) - Supervised by Julia Ladret
Why is youth central in and for local caring systems? This contribution drafted by four Sciences Po Capstone project students analyses various local systems of youth participation around the world under the lens of care, making a strong case for the inclusion of a significant youth dimension in caring systems and infrastructures.


? Future Envisioning Exercise: Towards Cities and Territories that Care for and with all People and the Planet
United Cities and Local Governments
The UCLG¡¯s Future Envisioning Exercise (FEE) on care, held in May 2025, solidified the political collective agenda on care of the municipalist movement and its partners. In the FEE, care emerges as a powerful lens to develop cities and territories that place the wellbeing of all people and the planet at the core of public action.


? Careful Infrastructures: Public-Common Partnerships for a City that Cares
Bertie Russell and Keir Milburn (Abundance)
Local and regional governments have the possibility to promote care and wellbeing beyond profit. Abundance proposes a powerful care infrastructure model, Public-Common Partnerships, that can be implemented to improve the lives of our communities and prioritize access to goods and services beyond market dynamics.?


? Incorporating the Right to Care in Strategic Urban Planning
Centro Iberoamericano de Desarrollo Estrat¨¦gico Urbano - CIDEU
How can care be integrated in strategic urban planning processes? Through a mix of examples and theoretical suggestions, CIDEU¡¯s contribution proposes a hands-on, rights-based guide to design, implement and evaluate care infrastructures and care systems in urban planning.?(This contribution is also available: en espa?ol)


? Governing with Care: The City of Tours¡¯ Integrated Approach to Municipal Health and Urban Wellbeing
Florence Roger and Aude Sivigny (City of Tours)
In its insightful contribution, the city of Tours showcases its integrated approach to municipal health and urban wellbeing. Care is used by the city as a powerful lens that shapes local governance and defines policy actions and infrastructures.?


? Delivering Clean Water and Safely Managed Sanitation: How Water and Sanitation Utilities Advance Caring Cities
Global Water Operators¡¯ Partnerships (GWOPA) and UN-Habitat
Water and sanitation are key public services for our cities and regions. At the same time, they are vectors of care by advancing gender equality, reducing inequalities, and promoting sustainable practices. Through compelling examples and voices from the field, GWOPA¡¯s contribution makes a strong case for the implementation of water and sanitation services and infrastructures from a caring lens.


? Enabling care through Social Production of Habitat
Diana Wachira, Irene Fuertes, Sophia Torres and Yolande Hendler (Habitat International Coalition General Secretariat)
The Social Production of Habitat (SPH) is a care infrastructure that provides concrete transformative pathways for cities that aim to prioritize people, the planet and care. Habitat International Coalition discusses virtuous examples of SPH where local communities worked hand in hand with local governments to promote care and collective wellbeing in habitat.

? Watch our series of videos on Social Production of Habitat.

? Participatory housing, living with care?
Pascale Bourgeaiseau, Mich¨¨le Cauletin and Annie Le Roux (Habitat Participatif France)
Participatory habitat can be a collective source of wellbeing, care, and sustainability. This contribution by the citizen movement Habitat Participatif France examines concrete experiences and outlines how participatory habitat is a type of infrastructure that allows for the incorporation of care in the everyday life of the inhabitants. (This contribution is also available: en fran?ais)


? Municipal Currencies as Care Infrastructures
Ester Barinaga (Lund University)
Creating the conditions for sustainable and inclusive economies at the local level is one of the main goals of subnational governments. This contribution by the Lund University professor Ester Barinaga explores the role that municipal currencies can play as care infrastructures in fostering resilient economies and strong and inclusive local democracies.


? Centering Care in Shaping Urban Futures
G?rsev Arg?n Uz and Ay?e G?? Yal??nkaya (Marmara Municipalities Union)
Marmara Municipalities Union¡¯s contribution delineates a number of care practices that are sustaining the objective of centering care in shaping urban futures. In it, steps for implementation, alongside overarching guidelines, are decisively presented for replicability in other local and regional governments.


? Public restaurants: Public infrastructure for the right to food
Abigail McCall and Anna Chworow (Nourish Scotland)
In its contribution, Nourish Scotland exposes the gap that exists around public infrastructure to realize the right to universal access to quality food. Public restaurants are discussed as remarkable care infrastructures, pulling together a blueprint for their replication and mainstreaming around the world.


? Restoring Waiwhakaata/Lake Hayes: A Community-led Path to Freshwater Care in Otago, New Zealand
Otago Regional Council and Waiwhakaata Strategy Group
The concept of care for the planet is brilliantly demonstrated by the Otago Council¡¯s contribution, which details an inclusive community-led path to freshwater care. Five types of care infrastructures are presented as tools to advance water protection and enhance community stewardship.


? City-Regions and Care Infrastructures: Examining Four Cases of City-Regions in Providing Care Infrastructures
Amogh Arakali, Aratrika Debnath and Carlos Jos¨¦ Celis (The New School)
In its contribution, The New School analyses how city-regions provide care infrastructures and address care challenges. Through four compelling examples, the paper demonstrates the potential that city-regions hold in terms of creating multilevel and multidimensional caring systems.


? Four infrastructures for transversally managing time and creating caring cities and regions
Marta Junqu¨¦ Suri¨¤ and Marc Martorell Escofet (Time Use Initiative)
Building on its contribution published in Stage 1, the Time Use Initiative proposes four actionable infrastructures to integrate time into municipal policies. These four infrastructures can advance innovative and caring approaches to local government, making time visible as a collective and public domain.


? Renaturing as a practice of care: Eschewing exclusionary pitfalls of green and climate policy
Barbara Lipietz and Thaisa Comelli (University College London)
UCL¡¯s contribution analyses the practice of renaturing as an infrastructure of care. Caring for nature and through nature become two crucial dimensions that caring cities need to master in order to avoid adverse outcomes such as displacement of vulnerable populations.


? Co-Creating Caring Cities and Regions through Public-Community Partnerships
Kelly Agopyan, Lorena Z¨¢rate and Sophia Torres (Global Platform for the Right to the City)
How can local and regional governments work together with communities to co-create caring territories?
The care infrastructure of Public-Community Partnerships is presented by the Global Platform for the Right to the City as a compelling pathway towards the achievement of cities and regions that are able to co-construct trust, social justice and wellbeing through a caring lens.?


? Culture, Creativity, Care: Community Initiatives for Urban Resilience
Dwinita Larasati, Amira Rahardiani and Qonita Afnani Firdaus (Institut Teknologi Bandung)
Can we use traditional cultural practices as infrastructures of care to cultivate urban resilience?
This contribution by Dwinita Larasati, Amira Rahardiani and Qonita Afnani Firdaus puts the lens on community initiatives for urban resilience in the face of climate change and environmental risks. Cultural practices demonstrate to be important care infrastructures to support both preparedness and recovery in disaster-prone contexts.


? Housing as an Infrastructure of Care
Camila Coci?a, Paula Sevilla N¨²?ez and Alexandre Apsan Frediani (International Institute for Environment and Development)
Housing is a central care infrastructure. IIED¡¯s piece discusses it from a housing justice perspective, by showing how caring approaches to housing contribute to improving the wellbeing of all people, to address and reach places that have been marginalised, and to change uncaring systems into more sustainable, caring, and justice-oriented ones.?


? Towards educating and caring cities: (re)thinking public spaces and infrastructures to strengthen learning and community relations
International Association of Educating Cities (AICE)
AICE¡¯s contribution examines the ways in which cities can put care and education at the centre of their action. Re-thinking public spaces and built environments as care infrastructures that are able to strengthen learning and community relations is key for caring and educating cities. (This contribution is also available: en espa?ol)


? Caring for Those Who Care: Local Care Systems for and with Migrants
UCLG and the Local Coalition for Migrant and Refugees
Local care systems have the unique ability to put in place infrastructures that care for and with migrant populations. The Local Coalition for Migrants and Refugees¡¯ contribution highlights best practices and proven infrastructures that align migration and care agendas.?(Policy Note also available)


? Cities as Ecosystems of Care: Managing Eco-Anxiety and Transforming Consumption and Production Patterns
Members of the Research and Innovation Technical Working Group (Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy)
Care infrastructures are key in addressing the challenges brought by the changing climate. The Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy¡¯s contribution presents inspiring cases that tackle eco-anxiety and reshape systems of consumption and production in a sustainable, just and caring manner.

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