Health and the urban environment: revolutions revisited

Opinion paper
, 2 pages
PDF (158.28 KB)
Preview of 17044IIED
Language:
English
Published: May 2009
Series:
Product code:17044IIED

From cholera pandemics to smog episodes, urban development driven by narrow economic interests has shown itself to be a serious threat to human health and wellbeing. Past revolutions in sanitation and pollution control demonstrate that social movements and governance reforms can transform an urban health penalty into a health advantage. But many environmental problems have been displaced over time and space, and never truly resolved. Health concerns need once again to drive an environmental agenda – but this time it must be sustainable over the long haul, and globally equitable. With the global economic crisis raising the ante, what’s needed is no less than a revolution in environmental justice that puts health, not economics, at the core of its values.

Cite this publication

McGranahan, G. (2009). Health and the urban environment: revolutions revisited. .
Available at https://www.iied.org/17044iied