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Book Cover
E-book
Author Njoh, Ambe J

Title Urban Planning and Public Health in Africa : Historical, Theoretical and Practical Dimensions of a Continent's Water and Sanitation Problematic
Published London : Taylor and Francis, 2016

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Description 1 online resource (225 pages)
Contents Cover -- Contents -- List of Figures, Tables and Boxes -- Acknowledgements -- Preface -- 1 A Brief History of Public Health and the Built Environment -- 2 The State, Ideology, Health and Built Space in Africa -- 3 Town Planning, Public Health and the Colonial Project -- 4 Racism Versus Health Concerns as the Rationale for Racial Segregation -- 5 Public Health Implications of Modernist Planning -- 6 Hygiene and Sanitation Conditions in West and Central Africa -- 7 Hygiene and Sanitation in the Eastern and Southern Africa Region -- 8 Hygiene and Sanitation in Northern Africa -- 9 Solid Waste Disposal and Sanitation Technologies, and Determinants of Access -- 10 Sustainable Hygiene and Sanitation Strategies -- References -- Index
Summary Established indicators of development suggest that, as a group, African countries lag behind their counterparts in other regions with respect to public health. Particularly noteworthy is the fact that the public health problems of these countries are rooted in preventable causes associated with hygiene and sanitation. It is customary to attribute the problems that ail Africa to the lack of financial resources. This book deviates from convention by suggesting non-financial factors as the source of sanitation problems on the continent, and argues the need to re-connect urban planning to public health. These two professions are consanguine relatives and emerged to combat the negative externalities of the industrial revolution and concomitant urbanization. However, with the passage of time, the professions drifted apart. Today, more than ever, there is a need for the two to be re-connected. This need is rooted in the increasing complexity of urban problems whose resolution requires interdisciplinary initiatives. To this end, there is hardly any question that urban public health initiatives are unlikely to succeed without the collaboration of both public health and urban planning experts. The book recognizes this truism, and stands as the first major academic work to demonstrate the inextricably intertwined nature of urban planning and urban public health in Africa
Notes Print version record
Subject City planning -- Health aspects -- Africa
Public health -- Africa
Urban health -- Africa
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781317003632
1317003632