This Urban October the Global Platform for the Right to the City is launching a campaign to pressure authorities to act on long-term structural transformations and commit to protecting the social function of the city. We demand cities understood as commons that...
R2C Day
Campaigns
News
The GPR2C stands up for the defenders of our human rights related to habitat
The Habitat International Coalition (HIC), its Latin American office (HIC-AL) and the Global Platform for the Right to the City (GPR2C) have come together to promote an online communications campaign to draw attention to the persecution suffered by human rights...
Declaration on the World Day for the Right to the City
We, social movements, civil society and local governments organizations are committed to social change through the promotion, defense and fulfillment of the Right to the City in every region of the world. On October 31st, we have agreed to celebrate the World Day for...
Urgent actionGlobal Call for The World Day for the Right to the City: Stop Forced Evictions
October 31th 2017 - The World Day for the Right to the City: Stop Forced Evictions The Global Platform for the Right to the City members, friends and allies from all around the world, gathering in Nairobi, Kenya, Declare the 31th October of every year the World Day...
Global call for the Right to the City: Stop Forced Evictions
Nairobi, October 11th, 2017 The Global Platform for the Right to the City members, friends and allies from all around the world, gathered in Nairobi, make a global call for the right to the city, and the universal opposition to forced evictions and displacements....
Publications
[STATEMENT] Beyond recovery: the Right to the City essentials for transformation – GPR2C Statement for the World Day for the Right to the City
On the World Day for the Right to the City, social movements, civil society organisations and local governments join our voices to demand democratic, diverse, solidary, just, multicultural and sustainable cities, villages and human settlements that are respected as...