Environmental health in the complex city: a co-evolutionary approach |
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Authors: | Thomas Verbeek Luuk Boelens |
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Affiliation: | Civil Engineering Department, Centre for Mobility and Spatial Planning, Ghent University, Gent, Belgium |
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Abstract: | While public health and urban planning were closely linked in the past, today both domains are institutionally separate. In most cases, health intersects with spatial planning processes only through obligatory evaluations, such as environmental impact assessments, or restrictive environmental legislation. This institutionalisation of health criteria in most western countries has difficulty in dealing with recent environmental health challenges, leading to continual distrust and conflict between citizens and the government. This impasse has recently been discussed by academics who acknowledge the complexity of both city and health issues. It seems, however, that the full extent of the issue has not been covered yet, leading to recommendations and frameworks that are useful but fixed and retrospective. This paper moves beyond those fixed frameworks to develop a better understanding of the complexity of the current disconnect and explores ideas for a future planning approach, grounded on new ideas of co-evolutionary and adaptive planning. |
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Keywords: | public health environmental planning adaptive planning co-evolution |
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