BioCities as Promotors of Health and Well-being
Version
Published
Date Issued
2023
Author(s)
Ubalde-López, Monica
Nieuwenhuijse, Mark
Spano, Giuseppina
Sanesi, Giovanni
Calfapietra, Carlo
Meyer-Grandbastien, Alice
O´Brien, Liz
Ottaviani Aalmo, Giovanna
Salbitano, Fabio
Dadvand, Payam
Type
Book Chapter
Language
English
Abstract
The mainstream public health community often treats the natural environment with ambivalence. On one side, there are infectious agents, extreme weather, and catastrophic events such as floods, landslides, wildfires, storms, and earthquakes that directly or indirectly sicken, injure, or kill people (Hartig et al. 2014). On the other hand, human health is positively connected with the characteristics and quality of nature near to where people live. This ambivalence becomes crucial in cities where the living environment has peculiar characteristics both for humans and other living organisms. Indeed, there are many ways in which the urban environment can affect human health, positively or negatively. BioCities develop as dynamic socio-ecological systems hosted by nature. Therefore, addressing the issue of health according to an integrated and holistic approach, which reduces the negative effects of the natural environment and optimises its positive aspects, is a primary pillar in the construction of BioCities.
Subjects
SD Forestry
ISBN
978-3-031-29466-2
Publisher DOI
Volume
20
Publisher
Springer
Submitter
Wilkes-AllemannJ
Citation apa
Ubalde-López, M., Nieuwenhuijse, M., Spano, G., Sanesi, G., Calfapietra, C., Meyer-Grandbastien, A., O´Brien, L., Ottaviani Aalmo, G., Salbitano, F., Wilkes-Allemann, J., & Dadvand, P. (2023). BioCities as Promotors of Health and Well-being. In Transforming BioCities, Designing Urban Spaces Inspired by Nature (Vol. 20, pp. 131–165). Springer. https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/36646
