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International Politics and the Environment

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Environment and Urbanization
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Research into the applicability of the healthy cities movement in Dakar district (Senegal): methodology and results

El Housseynou Ly

IAGU -Institut Africain de Gestion Urbaine (African Urban Management Institute) in Dakar, Senegal

Paule Simard

Centre québecois collaborateur de l'oms pour le développement de villes et villages en santé (Quebec/WHO Collaboratory Centre for the Development of Healthy Towns and Villages).

Ousseynou Eddje Diop

MELISSA programme for the World Bank/European Union in Pretoria, South Africa

Michel O'Neill

This paper reports on the findings of participatory research undertaken in three settlements within Dakar which sought to develop concrete actions for achieving "healthy towns and villages" and which also identified the constraints on such action. It begins by describing the key healthy city principles – local authority involvement, dialogue and coordination between sectors, and community participation. It then outlines the range of participatory techniques used in diagnosing problems and developing proposals, and discusses the potentials and constraints on their successful implementation. This highlights the potential contradictions between the "healthy cities" philosophy and conventional local authority management culture. But it also points to the more favourable conditions provided by decentralization and by new models of urban management which rely on the increased use of partnerships between neighbourhood associations, NGOs and local authorities.

Environment and Urbanization, Vol. 10, No. 2, 235-244 (1998)
DOI: 10.1177/095624789801000211


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