Gentrification and health in two global cities

In global cities, the impacts of gentrification on the lives and well-being of socially vulnerable residents have occupied political agendas. Yet to date, research on how gentrification affects a multiplicity of health outcomes has remained scarce. While much of the nascent quantitative research hel...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autores: Anguelovski, Isabelle|||0000-0002-6409-5155, Triguero-Mas, Margarita|||0000-0002-1580-2693, Connolly, James J. T.|||0000-0002-7363-8414, Kotsila, Panagiota|||0000-0003-0498-8362, Shokry, Galia|||0000-0002-2959-3677, Pérez-del-Pulgar, Carmen|||0000-0001-8331-2365, García-Lamarca, Melissa|||0000-0002-4813-3633, Argüelles, Lucía|||0000-0003-1024-0289, Mangione, Julia, Dietz, Kaitlyn, Cole, Helen|||0000-0003-0936-6810
Formato: artículo
Fecha de publicación:2019
País:España
Recursos:Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Repositorio:Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB
Idioma:inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:ddd.uab.cat:218496
Acesso em linha:https://ddd.uab.cat/record/218496
https://dx.doi.org/urn:doi:10.1080/23748834.2019.1636507
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palavra-chave:Gentrification and health
Health inequity
Neighborhoods and place
Descrição
Resumo:In global cities, the impacts of gentrification on the lives and well-being of socially vulnerable residents have occupied political agendas. Yet to date, research on how gentrification affects a multiplicity of health outcomes has remained scarce. While much of the nascent quantitative research helps to identify associations between gentrification and determined health outcomes, it tends to draw from static datasets collected for other studies to draw a posteriori and non-longitudinal conclusions. There is little attention in traditional public health research to purposely understand the health impacts of the complex, multi-layered, and rapid change produced by gentrification. Moreover, few studies examine the pathways and socio-spatial dynamics of the association between gentrification and health. In response, we use qualitative data collected in Boston and Barcelona to comprehensively identify how the health and well-being of long-term residents may be affected by gentrification and to call for new multi-methods research. In this initial assessment, we find a range of potential detrimental factors and potential pathways associated with gentrification, including individual-level physical and mental health outcomes such as obesity, asthma, chronic stress, and depression; neighborhood-level health determinants such as safety and new drug-dealing/use; and institutional-level health determinants such as healthcare precarity and worsened school conditions.