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El. knyga: Sustainable Development Goals and Urban Health: Strides, Challenges and Way Forward for Poor Neighborhoods

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The main aim of this book is to understand the interplay between the SDGs and urban health. This is a critical issue in cities, considering the complexity of health issues and how they transcend most SDGs. However, the SDGs are premised on a broad set of generalised indicators and targets. Simultaneously, local contexts differ; thus, a one-size-fits-all understanding of urban health problems is not helpful. Therefore, the SDGs require Health in All Policies (HiAP) – “an approach to public policy across sectors that systematically takes into account the health implications of decisions, seeks synergies and avoids harmful health impacts to improve population health and health equity” (Ramirez-Rubio et al. 2019). In applying the HiAP concept, this book adopts a case study approach and considers the poor neighborhoods of a South African city, specifically Bloemfontein, part of the Mangaung Metropolitan Municipality. Each chapter presented in the book considers a particular SDG and how that goal relates to urban health.

Chapter
1. INTRODUCTION.
Chapter
2. ENDING EXTREME POVERTY AND
ENHANCING URBAN HEALTH.
Chapter
3.  NO HUNGER SDG AND URBAN HEALTH IN
MANGAUNG.
Chapter
4. WATER AND SANITATION FOR URBAN HEALTH: A GENDER
PERSPECTIVE ON IMPACTS AND COPING STRATEGIES IN MANGAUNG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY.
Chapter
5. BUILDING RESILIENT URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE AND
INNOVATION FOR URBAN PUBLIC HEALTH: A CASE STUDY OF BLOEMFONTEIN, SOUTH
AFRICA.
Chapter
6. LIVEABILITY ASSESSMENT IN SOUTH AFRICAS HOSTEL
ACCOMMODATION: IMPLICATIONS FOR URBAN HEALTH AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOAL
11.
Chapter
7. INFORMAL SETTLEMENTS UNDER THE IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE AND
 THE COMMUNITY HEALTH FACTOR IN MANGAUNG METROPOLITAN  MUNICIPALITY, SOUTH
AFRICA.
Chapter
8. EXAMINING THE IMPACT OF URBAN GREEN SPACE CHANGES ON
PUBLIC HEALTH.
Chapter
9. PEACE, JUSTICE & STRONG INSTITUTIONS: REFLECTIONS
ON HEALTH GOVERNANCE AND HEALTH INEQUALITIES IN MANGAUNG.
Chapter
10. LIVED
EXPERIENCES OF THE ENERGY CONSUMERS OF SELECTED SITES IN DISADVANTAGED
COMMUNITIES IN BLOEMFONTEIN, SOUTH AFRICA.
Chapter
11. CONCLUSION.
ABRAHAM R MATAMANDA (PhD Urban & Regional Planning) is an NRF Y2-rated Urban and Regional Planner. Abraham lectures in the Department of Urban & Regional Planning at the University of Free State (UFS) and is the Deputy Chair of the SARChI Chair on City Region Economies in the Faculty of Economic and Management Sciences at UFS. Currently, he serves as the editor of the Town Planning Journal published by UFS and serves on the academic editorial board of Plos Water Journal. Abraham is also the current Chairperson of the Free State Chapter of the South African Planning Institute (SAPI). He is a fellow of the Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) Future Professorate Programme Phase 1, third Cohort. Abraham is the South African PI for a global collaborative research project exploring how children and young people from monetary poor households have adapted to the COVID-19 pandemic focusing on food, education and play/leisure. His research focuses on urban governance and planning, climate change adaptation and resilience, informal Global South urbanism, urban land markets and housing studies. 





VERNA NEL qualified as a town and regional planner at Wits University and obtained her MSc and PhD through UNISA. After three decades of working primarily in municipalities, she moved to the Urban and Regional Planning Department of the UFS. She is a. She is also affiliated with the SARChI Chair on City Region Economies in the Faculty of Economic and Management Sciences at UFS.  She is an NRF C2-rated scholar. Besides postgraduate supervision, Verna has written one book and co-edited four books which reflect her broad interests in planning. These include spatial governance, secondary and mining cities, local economic development, and spatial resilience.