Rights, Knowledge, and Governance for Improved Health Equity in Urban Settings

被引:0
|
作者
Françoise Barten
Marco Akerman
Daniel Becker
Sharon Friel
Trevor Hancock
Modi Mwatsama
Marilyn Rice
Shaaban Sheuya
Ruth Stern
机构
[1] Nijmegen Urban Health Group,School of Public Health and Social Policy
[2] Radboud University Nijmegen,School of Public Health
[3] UMCN,undefined
[4] Faculdade de Medicina do ABC,undefined
[5] Centro de Promoção da Saúde,undefined
[6] University College London,undefined
[7] The Australian National University,undefined
[8] University of Victoria,undefined
[9] National Heart Forum,undefined
[10] WHO Regional Office for the Americas,undefined
[11] Ardhi University,undefined
[12] University of the Western Cape,undefined
来源
Journal of Urban Health | 2011年 / 88卷
关键词
Urban; Health inequity; Governance; Participation; Intersectoral action; Evidence;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
All three of the interacting aspects of daily urban life (physical environment, social conditions, and the added pressure of climate change) that affect health inequities are nested within the concept of urban governance, which has the task of understanding and managing the interactions among these different factors so that all three can be improved together and coherently. Governance is defined as: “the process of collective decision making and processes by which decisions are implemented or not implemented”: it is concerned with the distribution, exercise, and consequences of power. Although there appears to be general agreement that the quality of governance is important for development, much less agreement appears to exist on what the concept really implies and how it should be used. Our review of the literature confirmed significant variation in meaning as well as in the practice of urban governance arrangements. The review found that the linkage between governance practices and health equity is under-researched and/or has been neglected. Reconnecting the fields of urban planning, social sciences, and public health are essential “not only for improving local governance, but also for understanding and addressing global political change” for enhanced urban health equity. Social mobilization, empowering governance, and improved knowledge for sustainable and equitable development in urban settings is urgently needed. A set of strategic research questions are suggested.
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页码:896 / 905
页数:9
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