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Set in the human-environment interaction space, this book applies new theoretical insights to health in urban environments. It stems from increasing interest in the creation of healthy settings and liveable cities, which aim to improve equity and sustainability in urban environments, but do so with theoretically simplistic and unimaginative models. Conceptually and practically, the book is situated at the intersection of human geography, health promotion and design of urban environments. Drawing on the work of Nigel Thrift, Donna Haraway, Jane Bennett, Sarah Whatmore, Elizabeth Shove and Bruno Latour among others it presents a synthesis of these authors’ theoretical contributions and what they can offer to understanding the health outcomes and impacts, interactions and encounters of urban environments. In particular the book turns its attention to socio-ecological models of health and expands and reframes these use ideas from more-than-human theory. As a practical contribution, it then directs these ideas towards reinvigorating health promotion and urban design.

The book will be of interest to researchers in health sociology and human geography as well as professionals and policymakers in public health, health promotion, social planning and urban design.

Arvustused

"In this fascinating and eminently readable book, Maller provocatively asks who the city is for, extending her answer to the array of more-than-humans that always inhabit urban environments. Its originality in expertly distilling the contribution of theory and practical action to the making of healthy cities, in ways that extend beyond only-the-human, makes this a strikingly innovative contribution to urban, health and environmental scholarship." Professor Gordon Walker, Lancaster University, UK

"Cities are conventionally understood as archetypal human and cultural places. It is still radical to consider them also as places where many other forms of life can and must flourish. In this timely book, Cecily Maller brings more-than-human perspectives into conversation with debates around the healthy city. Maller charts this pathway using her expertise in social practice to consider questions of complexity and change. She encourages scholars to intervene for the better, in the attempt to rethink and remake healthy urban environments." Professor Lesley Head, The University of Melbourne, Australia

"This timely and innovative book pushes more-than-human thinking in new and exciting directions - including the thorny issue of what these ideas might mean for policy and practice. This is essential reading for students and scholars across the humanities and social sciences, as well as for anybody who is interested in how humans might live better with the rest of nature." Professor David Evans, University of Sheffield, UK

"Inventive and intellectually rigorous, Healthy Urban Environments provides an ambitious new road map for exploring the relationship between health and the urban environment. Those interested in how recent theoretical innovations in environmental studies, urban studies and cultural geography are transforming how social scientists look at the relationship between cities and health need look no further than this wonderful book." Dr Alan Latham, University College London, UK

"Health Urban Environments challenges our comfortable familiarity with the city of cables and concrete through recognising the more-than-human urban. Offering a theoretically rigorous and original perspective this book enables us not only to think differently about our approach to the city, but to engage with the forms of habitat and inhabitation that can lead to healthier urban lives." Professor Harriet Bulkeley, Durham University, UK

Acknowledgements xi
1 Redefining healthy urban environments
1(20)
PART I Understanding more-than-human theories
21(70)
2 The Affective Turn: non-representational theories, affect and emotions
23(24)
3 The New Materialisms Turn: materiality, vital materialism and assemblages
47(24)
4 The Practice Turn: social practices, performance and routine
71(20)
PART II Making more-than-human healthy urban environments
91(67)
5 Understanding health as more-than-human
93(16)
6 Cities as more-than-human habitat
109(22)
7 Changing practices for understanding and making healthy urban environments
131(20)
8 More-than-human healthy futures
151(7)
Index 158
Cecily Maller is a Vice Chancellors Senior Research Fellow and Co-leader of the Beyond Behaviour Change Research Program Centre for Urban Research, School of Global, Urban and Social Studies, RMIT University, Australia.