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E-raamat: Urban Health Risk and Resilience in Asian Cities

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This book focuses on understanding urban vulnerability and risk mitigation, advancing good health and wellbeing, and analysing resilience measures for various Asian cities. Today, cities are the dominant human habitat, where a large number of environmental, social, cultural and economic factors have impacts on human health and wellbeing. Cities consist of complex, dynamic, socio-ecological, and technological systems that serve multiple functions in human health and wellbeing. Currently half of Asia’s population is urban, and that figure is expected to rise to 66 percent by 2050. Since urban areas are often most vulnerable to hazards, the people living in them need good health infrastructure facilities and technological support at various scales. As such, the need of the hour is to enhance the adaptive capacity, strengthen resilience, reduce vulnerability, and take risk mitigation measures in urban areas, which requires a systematic approach based on science–policy interface that is transformative, trans-disciplinary and integrative for a sustainable urban future. Global sustainable development goals are closely tied to urban human health and wellbeing: (1) the third of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals is to “Ensure healthy lives and promote wellbeing for all at all ages” and (2) the eleventh is to “Make cities inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable”. By addressing these goals, this book offers a highly useful resource for anyone concerned with healthy and resilient cities in Asia, today and tomorrow.

Systems Approach for Climate Change Impacts on Urban Health: Conceptual
Framework, Modeling and Practice.- SITE
(Societal-Institutional-Technical-Economic) Valuation framework : A case of
drinking water facilities and services in slum areas of Hyderabad
region.- Inequalities in access to water and sanitation: a case of slums in
major states of India.- Chennai floods 2005, 2015: vulnerability, risk and
climate change.- An environmental study of solid waste management system in
of Chandrapur city, Maharashtra, India.- Linkages between Purdah Practice,
Women Autonomy and Their Health Beliefs in India.- Development of urban heat
island and its relation to heat waves.- Growing urbanization, health
infrastructure and vector-borne diseases: A study in Khammam municipal
corporation, Telangana state.- Maternal Reproductive Health: A Comparison
between India and Empowered Action Group States.- Research Frontiers in
Water, Environment and Human Health.- Impacts of resource consumption and
waste generation on environment and its impact on human health: A study based
on ecological footprint analysis.- The Impact Of Climate Change On Human
Eyes.- Health and Well-being of Ageing Population in India: A Case Study of
Kolkata.- Noise pollution and its consequences on urban health in Sylhet
city.- Health Scenario in Delhi Status and Recent Trends of Vector Borne
and Water Borne Diseases in NCT of Delhi.- Quality of living, health and
wellbeing of slum dwelling women domestic workers in Kolkata.- Urban Growth
and Environment and Health Hazards in Kathmandu Valley, Nepal.- Impact of
Urbanisation on Megacities Lakes Using Remote Sensing Technique A Case
Study of Water Quality Analysis in Ambattur Lake, Chennai, India.- Impacts of
urbanization of ground water pollution an emerging issue and some
suggestions.- Evaluation of mass rapid transit system : A case study of
Delhi.- The first survey of flood disaster Preparedness in Hanoi,
Vietnam.- Tradition meets innovation: Herbal medicine as a sustainable source
of anticancer agents.- Urban Health Infrastructure in Small Cities:  Is it
Availability or Accessibility?.- An approach to social sustainability in
Chennai understanding the dynamics of public places.- Water scarcity in
Delhi: Mapping for solutions and the way forward. 
Prof. R.B. Singh is a professor of geography at Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi; the Secretary General and Treasurer of the International Geographical Union (IGU); the chair of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) Central Food Technological Research Institute, the Government of India; and a member of the International Council of Science (ICSU) and the scientific committee on Urban Health and Wellbeing. He was awarded the prestigious Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Research Fellowship and has presented papers and chaired sessions in more than 40 countries. He has published 14 books, 35 edited research volumes and more than 215 research papers in national and international journals (e.g. Climate Dynamics, Current Science, Advances in Meteorology, Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Agriculture, and Ecosystem and Environment). He is the editor of the Springer series Advances in Geographical and Environmental Sciences and Sustainable Development Goals.





 





Professor B. Srinagesh is a professor of geography at Osmania University, Hyderabad. He has a total of 17 years of research experience and has published numerous papers. He was the principal investigator for a major project on Globalization, Climate Change and its Impact on Health Health Mapping of Andhra Pradesh, sponsored by the University Grants Commission (UGC) 20102013 and was awarded a UGC postdoctoral fellowship for 20152017. He organised the IGU India Conference on Urban Health and Wellbeing as well as the Committee on Data for Science and Technology (CODATA) Training Programme for young South Asian researchers with the support of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.





 





Dr Subhash Anand is currently an associate professor of geography at the Department of Geography, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi. With over 20 years of teaching and research experience, he has published four books, as well as numerousresearch papers and book chapters. He has participated in a number of conferences and workshops and led the Indian delegation of the Indian Council of Social Sciences and Japan Society for Promotion of Sciences (ICSSR-JSPS) joint research programme.