This ground-breaking contribution to the field of urban epidemiology will be of lasting significance for our understanding of the post-COVID city. Matthew Gandy, University of Cambridge
With a sophisticated grasp of urban theory, astute historical sensibilities, and a shrewd eye for paradoxical outcomes, the authors of this timely book show how urbanization processes have produced and been transformed by infectious disease transmission. There are powerful lessons for rectifying the disastrous decisions of the past by embracing new forms of city-making. Diane E. Davis, Harvard University
[ The book] offers a rich and welcome synthesis in the various perspectives it covers (historical, geographical, critical). The clarity of its structure and its accessibility make it a work intended as much for an academic audience (students, doctoral students and researchers in the social sciences) as for professionals and decision-makers in the field of planning and development, and more widely in the field of public health policy on an urban and international scale. Elisabeth Peyroux, Métropoles