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1.
Environ Urban ; 31(2): 443-460, 2019 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31656370

ABSTRACT

Rapid urbanization in the global South is adding epidemiological and nutritional challenges and increasing disease and health burdens for citizens. Greater movement of people, animals, food and trade often provides favourable grounds for the emergence of infectious diseases, including zoonoses. We conduct a rapid evidence scan to explore what is known and hypothesized about the links between urbanization and zoonosis emergence. This points to rapid demographic growth, migration and density, increased movement of people and animals, and changes in land uses as the main processes linked to the prevalence of zoonosis in the urban global South. We argue that this emerging global health challenge is also deeply connected with the urbanization of poverty and inequalities within cities. Tackling the micro-level causal relationships between urbanization and zoonosis requires urgent attention to living conditions, as well as the wider socioenvironmental transitions and structural drivers that produce and reproduce risk accumulation in urban settings.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29232936

ABSTRACT

Urbanisation in low and middle-income nations presents both opportunities and immense challenges. As urban centres grow rapidly, inadequate housing and the lack of basic infrastructure and services affect a large and growing proportion of their population. There is also a growing body of evidence on urban poverty and its links with environmental hazards. There is, however, limited knowledge of how these challenges affect the ways in which poor urban residents gain access to food and secure healthy and nutritious diets. With some important exceptions, current discussions on food security continue to focus on production, with limited attention to consumption. Moreover, urban consumers are typically treated as a homogenous group and access to food markets is assumed to be sufficient. This paper describes how, for the urban poor in low and middle-income countries, food affordability and utilisation are shaped by the income and non-income dimensions of poverty that include the urban space.


Subject(s)
Developing Countries , Food Supply , Poverty , Urban Population , Diet , Economics , Environmental Pollution , Food , Humans , Income , Urbanization
3.
REMHU ; 19(36): 113-124, jan./jun. 2011.
Article in English | Index Psychology - journals | ID: psi-48109

ABSTRACT

This paper draws on recent evidence on the links between the impacts of climate change and growing mobility to explore how policies can best support and accommodate migration as an increasingly important a key factor of vulnerability, it argues that policies need to address its underlying causes in order to be effective.(AU)


O presente artigo se baseia em evidências recentes sobre a relação entre os impactos das mudanças climáticas e a crescente mobilidade, a fim de explorar as formas pelas quais políticas podem melhor apoiar e lidar com a migração como uma estratégica de adaptação cada vez mais importante. Uma vez que a pobreza, ligada à renda ou não, consiste em importante fator de vulnerabilidade, o artigo argumenta que políticas devem abordar suas causas subjacentes, a fim de serem efetivas.(AU)

4.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 365(1554): 2809-20, 2010 Sep 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20713386

ABSTRACT

This paper discusses the influences on food and farming of an increasingly urbanized world and a declining ratio of food producers to food consumers. Urbanization has been underpinned by the rapid growth in the world economy and in the proportion of gross world product and of workers in industrial and service enterprises. Globally, agriculture has met the demands from this rapidly growing urban population, including food that is more energy-, land-, water- and greenhouse gas emission-intensive. But hundreds of millions of urban dwellers suffer under-nutrition. So the key issues with regard to agriculture and urbanization are whether the growing and changing demands for agricultural products from growing urban populations can be sustained while at the same time underpinning agricultural prosperity and reducing rural and urban poverty. To this are added the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and to build resilience in agriculture and urban development to climate change impacts. The paper gives particular attention to low- and middle-income nations since these have more than three-quarters of the world's urban population and most of its largest cities and these include nations where issues of food security are most pressing.


Subject(s)
Agriculture , Climate Change , Food Supply , Urbanization , Humans
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