Sister city






Twin towns fingerpost signage in Oskarshamn, Sweden. The cities on the sign are the following: Middelfart, Denmark; Mandal, Norway; Pärnu, Estonia; Korsholm, Finland; and Hibiscus Coast, South Africa.


Sister cities or twin towns are a form of legal or social agreement between towns, cities, counties, oblasts, prefectures, provinces, regions, states, and even countries in geographically and politically distinct areas to promote cultural and commercial ties.[1] The modern concept of town twinning, conceived after the Second World War in 1947, was intended to foster friendship and understanding between different cultures and between former foes as an act of peace and reconciliation,[2][3] and to encourage trade and tourism.[1] By the 2000s, town twinning became increasingly used to form strategic international business links between member cities.[4][5]




Contents





  • 1 Terminology

    • 1.1 City diplomacy



  • 2 Europe


  • 3 United States


  • 4 Asia


  • 5 Linguistic reasons


  • 6 Political significance

    • 6.1 Termination of sister city relationships as the result of a dispute



  • 7 Gallery


  • 8 See also


  • 9 References


  • 10 External links




Terminology




An example of a 'gemellaggio' (twinning) agreement between Castellabate, Italy and Blieskastel, Germany


In the United Kingdom, the term "twin towns" is most commonly used; the term "sister cities" is generally used for agreements with towns and cities in the Americas.[1][6] In mainland Europe, the most commonly used terms are "twin towns", "partnership towns", "partner towns", and "friendship towns". The European Commission uses the term "twinned towns" and refers to the process as "town twinning".[1][6] Spain uses the term "ciudades hermanadas", which means "sister cities". Germany, Poland, and the Czech Republic use Partnerstadt (De) / miasto partnerskie (Pl) / partnerské město (Cz), which translate as "partner town or city". France uses ville jumelée (twinned town or city), and Italy has gemellaggio (twinning) and comune gemellato (twinned municipality).[7] In the Netherlands, the term is partnerstad or stedenband ("city bond", when providing mutual support). In Greece, the word αδελφοποίηση (adelfopiisi – fraternisation) has been adopted. In Iceland, the terms vinabæir (friend towns) and vinaborgir (friend cities) are used. In the former Soviet Bloc, "twin towns" and "twin cities" are used,[8] along with города-побратимы (Ru) (sworn brother cities).[9][10]


The Americas, South Asia, and Australasia use the term "sister cities" or "twin cities". In China, the term is 友好城市 (yǒuhǎo chéngshì – friendship city).[11] Sometimes, other government bodies enter into a twinning relationship, such as the agreement between the provinces of Hainan in China and Jeju-do in South Korea. The douzelage is a town twinning association with one town from each of the member states of the European Union.[1][12]


Despite the term often being used interchangeably, with the term "friendship city", this may mean a relationship with a more limited scope in comparison to a sister city relationship, and friendship city relationships are mayor-to-mayor agreements.[13]



City diplomacy


In recent years, the term "city diplomacy" has gained increased usage and acceptance, particularly as a strand of paradiplomacy and public diplomacy. It is formally used in the workings of the United Cities and Local Governments and the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group and recognised by the USC Center on Public Diplomacy. A March 2014 debate in the British House of Lords acknowledged the evolution of town twinning into city diplomacy, particularly around trade and tourism, but also in culture and post-conflict reconciliation.[14] The importance of cities developing "their own foreign economic policies on trade, foreign investment, tourism and attracting foreign talent" has also been highlighted by the World Economic Forum.[15]



Europe





Column dedicated to Paris in Rome


The earliest known town twinning in Europe was between Paderborn, Germany, and Le Mans, France, in 836.[2][16] Starting in 1905, Keighley in West Yorkshire, England, had a twinning arrangement with French communities Suresnes and Puteaux.[17][18] The first recorded modern twinning agreement was between Keighley and Poix-du-Nord in Nord, France, in 1920 following the end of the First World War.[5][18][19][20] This was initially referred to as an adoption of the French town; formal twinning charters were not exchanged until 1986.[21]


The practice was continued after the Second World War as a way to promote mutual understanding and cross-border projects of mutual benefit.[1][2][22][23][24] For example, Coventry twinned with Stalingrad and later with Dresden as an act of peace and reconciliation, all three cities having been heavily bombed during the war.[1][20][25][26][27] The City of Bath formed an "Alkmaar Adoption committee" in March 1945, when the Dutch city was still occupied by the German Army in the final months of the war, and children from each city took part in exchanges in 1945 and 1946.[28] Similarly, in 1947, Bristol Corporation (later Bristol City Council) sent five 'leading citizens' on a goodwill mission to Hanover.[5][20]Reading in 1947 was the first British town to form links with a former "enemy" city – Düsseldorf. The link still exists (Reading-Düsseldorf Association: http://www.reading-dusseldorf.org.uk/). Since 9 April 1956 Rome and Paris have been exclusively and reciprocally twinned with each other, following the motto: "Only Paris is worthy of Rome; only Rome is worthy of Paris."[29][30]


Within Europe, town twinning is supported by the European Union.[1][2][5] The support scheme was established in 1989. In 2003 an annual budget of about €12 million was allocated to about 1,300 projects. The Council of European Municipalities and Regions also works closely with the Commission (DG Education and Culture) to promote modern, high quality twinning initiatives and exchanges that involve all sections of the community. It has launched a website dedicated to town twinning.[31] As of 1995, the European Union had more than 7,000 bilateral relationships involving almost 10,000 European municipalities, primarily French (2837 twinnings) and German (2485 twinnings).[24]


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The painting of Gagny




Sutton twin towns mural




The painting of Minden




Public art has been used to celebrate twin town links, for instance in the form of seven mural paintings in the centre of the town of Sutton, Greater London. The five main paintings show a number of the main features of the London Borough of Sutton and its four twin towns, along with the heraldic shield of each above the other images. Each painting also features a plant as a visual representation of its town's environmental awareness.[32] In the case of Sutton this is in a separate smaller painting (above its main one) showing a beech tree, intended as a symbol of prosperity and from which Carshalton Beeches in the borough derives its name.[33]


Another example of the use of public art is the wall sculpture of the partner cities of Munich, Germany.


A recent study has concluded that geographical distance has very little, if any, influence upon communities' selections of a twin town.[34] Twinned towns are often chosen because of similarities between them; thus about 15 towns in Wales are twinned with towns in Brittany, and Oxford is with Bonn, Leiden, Grenoble and other university cities.[1] In Italy a good example of Twinnings is Rovigo with Viernheim, Bedford and Tulcea. Many former West German cities are twinned with former East German cities; these twinning links were established before the fall of the Iron Curtain. Famous examples are the partnerships of Hanover and Leipzig, both of which have important trade fair grounds, or between Hamburg and Dresden. The first US-German town twinning was in 1947 between Worthington, Minnesota and Crailsheim.[1]St Petersburg in Russia holds the record for the largest number of partnership arrangements with other communities.[34] In June 2012, the Scottish village of Dull and the US town of Boring, Oregon, agreed to twin their municipalities to promote tourism in both places, playing on their names.[35][36][37]


Recently some towns have made novelty twinning arrangements with fictional or virtual locations. Wincanton, England is partnered with Ankh-Morpork from Terry Pratchett's Discworld books.[38]


Town twinning has increasingly been used to form strategic international business links. For example, in the 1990s, when the Nottingham City Council in the UK considered installing a tram network, it consulted experts from its twin city of Karlsruhe, which has one of the most extensive and efficient tram networks in Germany. With assistance from Karlsruhe's specialist engineers, Nottingham completed its second tram line in 2013.[4] In 2014, Bristol and New Orleans announced their intention to form a 'tuning' partnership based on a shared musical heritage and culture offer, at the initiative of Bristol Mayor George Ferguson.[39]Annecy, France and Nerima, Tokyo have for several years shared a partnership based around their "co-existent animation industry".[40][41]



United States






Dull, Perth and Kinross is twinned with Boring, Oregon


Toledo, Ohio twinned with Toledo, Spain in 1931 and was the first city in North America to engage in town twinning. Denver, Colorado twinned with Brest, France was the second twinned city in North America. Liberal, Kansas was twinned with Olney, Buckinghamshire in 1950, and the cities have run a joint Pancake Day race ever since.[42][43] Littleton, CO twinned with Bega, Australia in 1961. Tashkent, the capital city of Uzbekistan, was twinned with Seattle, Washington in 1973. Rochester, Minnesota and Knebworth, UK are both centers for primary medical research, and they twinned in 1967.


Town twinning begins for a variety of reasons. Generally, partner towns have similar demographics and size. They may arise from business connections, travel, similar industries, diaspora communities, or shared history. For example, the partnership between Portland, Oregon and Bologna, Italy arose from shared industries in biotechnology and education, and a "similar attitude towards food",[44] whereas Chicago's link with Warsaw, Poland began with Chicago's historic Polish community.[45] The twinning of Indianapolis with Monza, Italy is due to both cities' long association with auto racing. Mexico City is also one of Chicago's sister cities.





Los Angeles City Hall with twin towns fingerpost


A twin towns program was instituted in the United States in 1956 when President Dwight D. Eisenhower proposed a citizen diplomacy initiative. Sister Cities International (SCI) was originally a program of the National League of Cities, but it became a separate corporation in 1967 due to the growth and popularity of the program.[46]





Thessaloniki stele, in sister city Melbourne[47]


Twin town cultural events include the annual National Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington, D.C. honoring Washington's twin relationship with Tokyo City. Many twinned towns developed business agreements with their partners. For example, Vermont's Ben & Jerry's Ice Cream company opened a factory in the Republic of Karelia in Russia and offered the same profit-sharing plan to its Russian employees.



Asia





Isfahan Street in Kuala Lumpur (top) and Kuala Lumpur Avenue in Isfahan (bottom).


Town twinning is supported in Japan by the Council of Local Authorities for International Relations, a joint agency of local governments established by the Japanese government in 1988 (similar to Sister Cities International, its counterpart in the US). More recently, Tokyo has begun to actively promote 'city diplomacy' with other global cities at the initiative of its governor Yoichi Masuzoe.[48]



Linguistic reasons



Relationships between communities can also arise because of shared names; they may be named after one community (as in the case of Córdoba), they may share names (as in the case of Santiago de Compostela), or their names may have a common etymology.




Road sign of Artieda de Aragón and Emiliano Zapata, an autonomous Zapatista municipality.


These similarities usually arise from sharing the same or related language, or from having been a colony or previously conquered.



Political significance


Twinning towns and cities is sometimes done for political purposes. The Hungarian city Gyöngyös was twinned with the Azerbaijani city of Shusha in 2013, signing the twinning agreement with representatives from the Azerbaijani government; Hungary recognises Shusha as part of Azerbaijan, even though since the end of the Karabakh War it has been controlled by the military forces of Armenia and the unrecognised Artsakh (de jure part of Azerbaijan).[49] An attempt was made in 2003 by Preston city councillors in England to twin with the Palestinian town of Nablus in the name of solidarity.[50]



Termination of sister city relationships as the result of a dispute


  • In 2012, the city of Nanjing suspended their sister city relationship with Nagoya after Nanking Massacre denialist statements by Nagoya's mayor, Takashi Kawamura.[51]

  • In 2013, the Italian cities of Milan, Venice, and Turin, formerly twinned with Saint Petersburg, suspended their links due to Russia's passage of anti-gay legislation.[52][53] Activists in California circulated petitions urging California cities and countries with relationships with Russian counterparts to take similar steps.[54]

  • In 2014, Prague terminated its partnership with Saint Petersburg and Moscow because of the Russian military intervention in Ukraine. Moscow had been Prague's partner city since 1995.[55]

  • In 2017, the mayor of Osaka, Hirofumi Yoshimura, ended the city's 60-year relationship with San Francisco due to the erection of a memorial to comfort women in downtown San Francisco.[56][57] Similarly, the cities of Glendale, California and Higashiosaka, Japan came close to terminating their twinning in 2013 and 2014 because of an ongoing dispute over Glendale's support for the erection of a statue dedicated to Korean comfort women in a city park.[58]


Gallery






See also


  • Council of Local Authorities for International Relations

  • Cross-border town naming

  • Douzelage

  • Global city

  • Lists of twin towns and sister cities

  • List of twin towns and sister cities in Europe

  • Most Ancient European Towns Network

  • Paradiplomacy

  • Partnership2Gether

  • Sister Cities International


References




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    line feed character in |url= at position 35 (help)



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  13. ^ "What is the difference between a Sister City and a Friendship City? | AustinTexas.gov - The Official Website of the City of Austin". austintexas.gov. Retrieved 2018-01-18.


  14. ^ "Lords Hansard text for 26 Mar 2014 (pt 0001)". Retrieved 26 April 2016.


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  17. ^ Frank Crane (2008). War and World Government. BiblioBazaar, LLC. p. 200. ISBN 978-0-559-44381-7. Retrieved 20 September 2009.


  18. ^ ab "France Magazine – Twin Towns". www.francemag.com. Retrieved 6 November 2009.


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  24. ^ ab Furmankiewicz, Marek (21 March 2004). "Town-twinning as a factor generating international flows of goods and people" (PDF). Institute of Geography and Regional Development, University of Wrocław, Poland. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 July 2013. Retrieved 29 July 2013.


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  39. ^ unknown (27 February 2014). "How Bristol could become the New Orleans of the UK". Bristol Post. Archived from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 17 August 2014.


  40. ^ 'Stimulation Project for the Coexistent Animation Industry Cluster in Nerima', Nerima City, January 2009


  41. ^ 'Using pop culture to assert distinctiveness of place', Japan Local Government Centre, London, March 2011


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  43. ^ "Pancake Race 2007". Archived from the original on 6 February 2010. Retrieved 26 April 2016.


  44. ^ "Mission". Portland Bologna Sister City Association. Retrieved 16 July 2012.


  45. ^ Leroux, Charles (31 July 2001). "Chicago has assembled a sorority of sister cities". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 16 July 2012.


  46. ^ Sister Cities International Fact Sheet Archived 24 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine.


  47. ^ "Greek twinnings" (PDF). Central Union of Municipalities & Communities of Greece. Retrieved 25 August 2013.


  48. ^ Alexander Martin. "Tokyo Governor Seeks Better Ties With Seoul". WSJ. Retrieved 26 April 2016.


  49. ^ "APA – Gyöngyös city of Hungary fraternize with Azerbaijan's occupied town of Shusha – PHOTOSESSION". Retrieved 26 April 2016.


  50. ^ "Nablus twinning bid rejected". BBC News. Retrieved 26 April 2016.


  51. ^ Wang, Chuhan (22 February 2012). "Nanjing suspends official contact with Nagoya". CNTV.


  52. ^ "Milan severs twin city ties with St Petersburg over 'homosexual propaganda' ban". The Telegraph. 29 November 2012. Retrieved 30 November 2012.


  53. ^ Claire Bigg, Sister Cities Ramp Up Russia Boycott Over Antigay Law, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (July 19, 2013).


  54. ^ Bajko, Matthew S. (15 August 2013). "Political Notebook: Cities asked to suspend ties with Russian counterparts". The Bay Area Reporter. Retrieved 27 August 2013.


  55. ^ "Prague suspends partnership with Russian cities". Prague Post. 2 September 2014. Archived from the original on 12 September 2014. Retrieved 12 September 2014.


  56. ^ Jacey Fortin, 'Comfort Women' Statue in San Francisco Leads a Japanese City to Cut Ties, New York Times (November 25, 2017).


  57. ^ Adam Taylor, Osaka mayor to end sister city status with San Francisco over 'comfort women' statue, Washington Post (November 25, 2017).


  58. ^ "Japan city mayor lodges protest over "comfort women" memorial cost". GlobalPost. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 26 April 2016.


  59. ^ "Sister Cities International (SCI)". Sister-cities.org. Archived from the original on 13 June 2015. Retrieved 21 April 2013.



External links




  • European congress on citizenship and twinning

  • Germany and the town twinning movement

  • Town twinning in Europe's municipalities, towns and regions

  • Twinning in Europe

  • UK Town Twinning Portal


  • "Twinnings for Tomorrow's World – A Practical Handbook" (PDF). Brussels: CEMR Council of European Municipalities and Regions. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 May 2008. Retrieved 11 January 2010.









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