A new urbanism: building more liveable and resilient cities

Main takeaways

Nearshoring: A new era of connection for Latin America

<p><b>The decoupling process of the United States and China, which has prompted investors to diversify the geographic positioning of their investments, shows no signs of abating.&nbsp;</b>Decoupling, or systematically closing off economic engagement, is dismantling a long era of trade and economic integration between the two countries. As a result, U.S.-China bilateral trade in goods and services has decreased from 3.7% of U.S.

Call for Expression of Interest: Urban Performance Index

Dear municipal leaders,

Accurate and comprehensive measurement is the foundation for monitoring progress towards humanity's collective goals. With a projection that over 60% of the global population will reside in urban areas by 2030, it becomes crucial for cities to prioritise inclusivity, safety, resilience, and sustainability. Achieving these objectives requires reliable and comprehensive measurement of cities’ progress on critical metrics of sustainable urban development.

Infrastructure reimagined

Economist Impact set out to imagine a world in which our infrastructure is built in sync with the natural elements of fire, water, wind and earth. Such a world would feature greater infrastructural resilience and more sustainable outcomes.

Measuring Transport Connectivity for Trade in Asia

Measuring Transport Connectivity for Trade in Asia was commissioned by the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) as an annex to , the AIIB’s annual flagship publication.

Infrastructure | How will covid-19 reshape key Australian industries?

Prior to the covid-19 pandemic, Australia was undergoing an infrastructure boom, with over A$200bn1 (US$139bn) in projects under construction. One of Australia’s longstanding challenges was keeping pace with the rate of growth, particularly in transport infrastructure.

How tech is transforming infrastructure

In our survey of more than 750 executives from across eight countries, we found 56.5 per cent of the 200 respondents from the resources, energy and infrastructure sectors “strongly agree” their companies will increase technology adoption in the coming five years.

Accelerating urban intelligence: People, business and the cities of tomorrow

About the research

Why infrastructure investment should serve local communities

We cannot continue to discuss the needs and potential benefits of infrastructure projects without involving the very communities whose lives will be impacted by such projects in the decision-making process, argues Winnie Byanyima, the executive director of Oxfam International.

Flexible cities: The future of Australian infrastructure

As this report finds, cities need smarter and more flexible infrastructure to address these challenges— infrastructure that can make better use of existing space and resources, and that can adapt in accordance with uncertain, fast-moving future realities.

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