Literature DB >> 26812849

Creating healthy and just bioregions.

Keith Pezzoli, Robert Allen Leiter.   

Abstract

Dramatic changes taking place locally, regionally, globally, demand that we rethink strategies to improve public health, especially in disadvantaged communities where the cumulative impacts of toxicant exposure and other environmental and social stressors are most damaging. The emergent field of Sustainability Science, including a new bioregionalism for the 21st Century, is giving rise to promising place-based (territorially rooted) approaches. Embedded in this bioregional approach is an integrated planning framework (IPF) that enables people to map and develop plans and strategies that cut across various scales (e.g. from regional to citywide to neighborhood scale) and various topical areas (e.g. urban land use planning, water resource planning, food systems planning and "green infrastructure" planning) with the specific intent of reducing the impacts of toxicants to public health and the natural environment. This paper describes a case of bioregionally inspired integrated planning in San Diego, California (USA). The paper highlights food-water-energy linkages and the importance of "rooted" community-university partnerships and knowledge-action collaboratives in creating healthy and just bioregions.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26812849      PMCID: PMC5554710          DOI: 10.1515/reveh-2015-0050

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Environ Health        ISSN: 0048-7554            Impact factor:   3.458


  2 in total

1.  Sustainability science: a room of its own.

Authors:  William C Clark
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-02-06       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  One Bioregion/One Health: An Integrative Narrative for Transboundary Planning along the US-Mexico Border.

Authors:  Keith Pezzoli; Justine Kozo; Karen Ferran; Wilma Wooten; Gudelia Rangel Gomez; Wael K Al-Delaimy
Journal:  Glob Soc       Date:  2014
  2 in total
  1 in total

Review 1.  The potential of nature-based solutions to deliver ecologically just cities: Lessons for research and urban planning from a systematic literature review.

Authors:  Melissa Pineda-Pinto; Niki Frantzeskaki; Christian A Nygaard
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2021-04-16       Impact factor: 5.129

  1 in total

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