dot
dot
Search
 
 
United Kingdom
Home eukn.org
 
Home > News > Mayors from 50 cities compete for the 2008 World Mayor ...
 
Print pageContactSitemap
-
  • E-library
  • News
  • Meetings
  • About EUKN
  • Partners
-
-
-
Cases

The Cool Sea: Wate...George Street Quar...
Researches
Entrepreneurial di...State of European ...Strategies for int...more
Making connections...

Policies

Paved with gold: t...Kvarterloeft: 10 y...Leipzig Charter on...more
How to improve res...

-
-
Mayors from 50 cities compete for the 2008 World Mayor Award
24-01-2008

A great mayor must possess good administrative abilities, be able to provide safety and security and protect the environment. Having the ability to foster good relations between communities from different cultural, racial and social backgrounds is also considered important. At least this is what city residents from all continents think constitutes a good mayor. Citizens from all over the world took part in the first round of the 2008 World Mayor contest, which was carried out in 2007. More than 100,000 voters nominated a total of 820 mayors for this year’s World Mayor Award.
The World Mayor Project was first carried out in 2004. As in previous years, the 2008 contest again seeks out mayors who have the vision, passion and skills to make their cities amazing places in which to live and work - and visit. The World Mayor Project aims to show what outstanding mayors can achieve, and thus raise their profiles. It honours those who have both served their communities well and contributed to the well being of cities nationally and internationally. The most outstanding mayor of 2008 will be presented with the World Mayor Award.
Based on the number of nominations and the persuasiveness of supporting statements, City Mayors, the organisers of the World Mayor project, has drawn up a list of 50 finalists. The list includes 11 mayors from Asia, 10 from North America, 11 from Latin America, 15 from Europe, as well as 3 from Africa.
Some of the finalists for this year’s World Mayor title are from the world’s best-known and largest cities, while others represent smaller communities. Most of this year’s finalists have been short-listed for the first time. Under the World Mayor rules, winners and runner-ups from previous years were not eligible. They include John So, Lord Mayor of Melbourne (Australia), Job Cohen, Mayor of Amsterdam (Netherlands), Hazel McCallion, Mayor of Mississauga (Canada) and Edi Rama, Mayor of Tirana (Albania)
Source: City Mayors
back


  dot
Copyright-Masthead-Disclaimer-PrivacydotRSS feed