Home » Resource Hub

Sustainable city rankings, benchmarking and indexes: Looking into the black box

Abstract

City rankings, benchmarking and indexes are a global phenomenon as public and private institutions across the world foster city performance measures. These tools are allegedly useful to guide and evaluate policies implemented by local authorities in diverse fields, but are especially prominent in the field of sustainability. Nevertheless, there is a lack of knowledge about the real methodological basis of this type of tool. The purpose of this study is to analyze and evaluate the measurement and monitoring practices of 21 urban sustainability rankings, benchmarks and indexes paying special attention to methodological issues — i.e. shedding light into the black box of the practices. The findings indicate that these tools for urban measurement tend to neglect complex causalities and they lack transparency in relation to data collection, weighting and the aggregation process in their design. Similarly, these tools tend to be biased and as a result, they tend to ignore badly ranked cities and reinforce existing stereotypes. Implications for scholars, practitioners and public decision makers are discussed.

Resource Details

Organization: Sustainable Cities and Society
Date: 2020-02-01
Resource Type: Publication, Resources
Topic: Popular Education, Sustainable Buildings

Related resources (by topic)

Critical participatory action research: Methods and praxis for intersectional knowledge production

Building on the conceptual foundation of articles published in the 2005 volume of the Journal of Counseling Psychology on the qualitative turn in Counseling Psychology, we write to introduce and reflect on Critical Participatory Action Research (CPAR) as an intersectional…

Delivering Urban Resilience: Costs and benefits of city-wide adoption of smart surfaces

This report quantifies the benefits and costs of smart surface technologies and finds that the risks from extreme heat and weather can be offset by these technologies. It draws on  Washington D.C., Philadelphia, and El Paso as case studies and…

Dismantling anti-black linguistic racism in English language arts classrooms: Toward an anti-racist black language pedagogy

In this article, the author historicizes the argument about Black Language in the classroom to contextualize the contemporary linguistic inequities that Black students experience in English Language Arts (ELA) classroom. Next, the author describes anti-black linguistic racism and interrogates the…

Doing Business on Uneven Ground: Advancing land equality is key to addressing climate change and farmer rights

Land is the bridge between companies’ environmental and social sustainability agendas, and it is foundational to both. To implement their commitments on climate change, net zero emissions, human rights, women’s empowerment, and farmer livelihoods, companies must focus on land in…

Help us expand the Resource Hub

Share resources that you think would be a good addition to this tool and our team will review them for inclusion in future updates.