

Measuring a city’s relationship to its environment, they write, is “complex” and “challenging”, and eco-cities cannot easily be compared.

But they conclude that, in essence, there is no good system. The study’s researchers have also reviewed other systems for assessing a city’s greenness, coming up with 14 international-level methods. Political engagement is scored and ranked on the basis of five factors: international organizations, embassies and consulates, think tanks, political conferences, and local institutions with international reach.Copenhagen was a predictable victor in the European region of the Green City Index. Information exchange is scored and ranked on the basis of four factors: number of international news bureaus, level of censorship, amount of international news in the leading local papers, and broadband subscriber rate.Ĭultural experience is scored and ranked on the basis of six factors: museums, visual and performing arts, major sporting events a city hosts, international travelers, diverse culinary establishments, and sister city relationships. Human capital is scored and ranked on the basis of five factors: size of a city’s foreign-born population, quality of its universities, number of international schools, international student population, and percentage of residents with university degrees. Globalization Indicators Business Activity (30%)īusiness activity is scored and ranked on the basis of five factors: number of international conferences, flow of goods (air and port), capital markets, number of companies among the top 40 global service firms, and number of Fortune Global 500 companies with headquarters in the city. (Click on the image below to view the full-size chart in a separate browser tab or window.) The multi-colored bars show each global city’s performance on the five dimensions of globalization and convey each dimension’s contribution to the city’s overall globalization score. The chart below presents the rankings for the top 20 most global cities for 20. Kearney, Foreign Policy and the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. The Urban Elite Global Cities Index (2010) is a ranking of the most global cities based on five aspects of globalization: business activity, human capital, information exchange, cultural experience, and political engagement.
