Charter Cities Institute - Our Story
webThe Charter Cities Institute focuses on governance innovation through new city development, which intersects with AI safety themes around institutional design, coordination, and creating better governance frameworks for emerging technologies.
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Summary
The Charter Cities Institute (CCI) is a nonprofit founded in 2017 that builds the ecosystem for charter cities—new cities with special jurisdictions and governance systems aimed at lifting people out of poverty. CCI provides research, technical assistance, partnerships, and media to coordinate stakeholders including governments, developers, and multilateral institutions. It was inspired by Paul Romer's 2009 TED talk on charter cities.
Key Points
- •CCI is a nonprofit dedicated to developing charter cities—new cities with independent jurisdictions and experimental governance systems.
- •Founded in 2017 by Mark Lutter, CCI coordinates stakeholders across real estate, government, finance, and international development.
- •Activities include legal/regulatory framework creation, academic and practical research, technical assistance, and global events.
- •Inspired by Nobel Laureate Paul Romer's 2009 TED talk introducing the charter cities concept.
- •CCI aims to accelerate charter city development as a tool for economic development and governance innovation.
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Charter Cities Institute - Our Story
Our Story
Our Mission
The Charter Cities Institute (CCI) is empowering new cities with better governance to lift tens of millions of people out of poverty. CCI is a nonprofit dedicated to building the ecosystem for charter cities—new cities granted a special jurisdiction to create a new governance system.
How the Charter Cities Institute is building the ecosystem for charter cities:
Creating legal, regulatory, and planning frameworks needed for rapid urban growth.
Influencing the global agenda through practical and academic research, engagement, and partnerships.
Advising and convening key stakeholders like governments, new city developers, and multilateral institutions.
What We Do
The process to develop each new charter city is complex and requires the collaboration of numerous stakeholders. To achieve our mission, the Charter Cities Institute helps coordinate these efforts and accelerate the development of charter cities with: Research & Technical Assistance : Our team does the research to guide new city developers and governments on how to carry out these projects. We work with them directly to develop the legal frameworks to grant charter cities an independent jurisdiction and to implement the new city’s governance structure. Our research aims to establish the economic case for charter cities and inform the decisions of key stakeholders.
Partnerships & Events : We bring together key stakeholders from around the world, such as government officials, city developers, and individuals passionate about improving governance, through events and partnerships. We aim to build relationships and create charter city collaborations to build momentum for this movement. Our events include regular charter city summits, dinner event series, and meetups in cities globally.
Media : We create content to build awareness for the charter cities movement and make our ideas accessible to a wider audience. Our blog, videos, and podcast offer real-time insight into how we think about charter cities, experiments in governance, and developmental case studies from around the world. CCI’s newsletter gives an overview of our work and commentary on charter cities-adjacent activity around the world.
Our History
In 2009, Nobel Laureate Paul Romer gave his famous TED talk introducing the concept of charter cities to the world. Since then, organizations across every continent have come together in a race to build the world’s first successful series of charter cities. The Charter Cities Institute started with an insight: numerous stakeholders were interested in charter cities and approaching the idea from different angles, but there were limited avenues of coordination or communication between them.
Individuals and organizations working in real estate, government, finance, and international development were independently discovering the potential of new cities to chart new developmental cou
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