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Why indigenous consultation in urban planning must be real
Manila Bulletin
|November 7, 2025
Walk any city block and you’re moving across layered stories—rivers channeled into pipes, fields paved over, names translated or erased.
Urban planning decides whose stories keep shaping the place. If Indigenous Peoples are missing from that table, the city is built on a partial truth—and partial truths make for brittle towns: more conflict, weaker ecosystems, poorer health, and fewer chances to belong. Consulting indigenous communities in urban planning isn’t a courtesy; it’s core to building cities that work. And it only matters if the consultation is genuine.
Start with a simple fact: Cities stand on indigenous lands. Urbanization didn’t dissolve those relationships; it obscured them. Planning that pretends a city began at the surveyor’s stake produces predictable harms—displaced communities, sacred places bulldozed, waterways straight-jacketed, and legal fights that drag on for years. Planning with indigenous nations recognizes ongoing title, treaty, and custodial responsibilities. It reduces risk, saves public money, and earns social license before asphalt is poured.
Indigenous knowledge also makes cities more resilient. Traditional ecological knowledge isn’t nostalgia; it’s a dataset gathered over centuries with practical answers to the questions planners are wrestling with now: how to manage fire along urban fringes, how to reconnect floodplains and wetlands, where wildlife corridors want to be, which native plantings cool streets without guzzling water, how to daylight creeks without simply shifting flood risk downstream. When this expertise is integrated from the outset, stormwater systems fail less often, heat islands shrink, and parks support both biodiversity and human health.
This story is from the November 7, 2025 edition of Manila Bulletin.
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