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Health Promotion International 2009 24(Supplement 1):i19-i36; doi:10.1093/heapro/dap052
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© The Author (2009). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

This article appears in the following Health Promotion International issue: Special Supplement on European Healthy Cities [View the issue table of contents]

Evidence for Healthy Cities: reflections on practice, method and theory

Evelyne de Leeuw*

Faculty of Health, Medicine, Nursing and Behavioural Sciences, Deakin University, Victoria, Australia

* Corresponding author. E-mail: evelyne.deleeuw{at}deakin.edu.au


   Abstract

The European Healthy Cities project can be characterized as a social movement that employs an extremely wide range of political, social and behavioural interventions for the development and sustenance of urban population health. At all of these levels, the movement is inspired by ideological, theoretical and evidence-based perspectives. The result of this stance is a dynamic, complex and diverse landscape of initiatives, plans, programmes and actions. In quantitative terms (the number of WHO designated cities and associated cities and communities through national networks), ‘Healthy Cities’ can be regarded as an extraordinary accomplishment and a credit for both WHO and cities in the movement. In qualitative terms, however, critics of the movement have maintained that little evidence on its success and effectiveness has been generated. This critique finds its foundations in the mere perceptions of evidence, the politics of science and urban governance, and perspectives on the preferred or professed utilities of evidence-based health notions. The article reviews the nature of evidence and its interface with politics and governance. Applying a conceptual framework combining insights from knowledge utilization theory, theoretical perspectives on (health) policy development, theory-based evaluations and planned intervention approaches, it demonstrates that, although the evidence is overwhelming, there are barriers to the implementation of such evidence that should be further addressed by ‘Healthy Cities’.

Key words: Healthy Cities; evidence; theory; methodology


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