Cities are critical sites for enquiry and action in relation to health and well-being. With up to 70 per cent of the world’s population estimated to be living in urban areas by 2050, global health will be determined increasingly in cities. Yet while urbanisation is associated with improvements in income levels and health outcomes, at the same time, the pressures of urban growth have contributed to the emergence of stark social and health inequalities in cities of the developed and developing world. Furthermore, as Africa and Asia become the locus of urbanisation, researchers and policy-makers are increasingly contextualising, questioning or even moving beyond the urban health knowledge and approaches we have developed over the past century mainly in Western Europe and North America.
In response to these challenges, the 2011 , organised by the London School of Economics and Political Science and the Alfred Herrhausen Society in partnership with the University of Hong Kong, brought together over 170 planners, architects, sociologists, medical doctors, public health experts and economists from 36 cities and 22 countries to help identify the routes through which new meanings, methods and interventions for health and well-being might be developed for greater effect in today’s cities. A of the conference discussions, of all presentations and discussions, and the can all be accessed online. Initial results from new research by ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Cities and the University of Hong Kong explored urban health and well-being at a range of spatial scales and through different methodologies, including an , intra-urban spatial analysis (, , ) of health and social outcomes in Hong Kong, and qualitative analysis of with residents of four Hong Kong neighbourhoods.
We are now developing our academic publishing, building on initial research published in the , as well as the conference discussions themselves, in collaboration with conference participants Professor Paul Yip (University of Hong Kong) and Professor Sharon Friel (Australian National University), amongst others.
Project coordinator
Myfanwy Taylor
Researchers
Cristina Inclan-Valadez, Jens Kandt, Victoria Pinoncely
Journal articles
Conference newspapers
Conference reports
Cities, health and well-being - Summary — | (0.3 MB)
Magazine articles
Burdett, R., and Taylor, M., 2011. ‘Can Cities Be Good For You?’, in Cities Health and Well-being, Urban Age Conference Newspaper, London: Urban Age programme.