Happy and Healthy Cities
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050). This special issue belongs to the section "Health, Well-Being and Sustainability".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (1 May 2021) | Viewed by 46839
Special Issue Editors
Interests: Peter Nijkamp is emeritus Professor in regional and urban economics and in economic geography at the VU University, and associated with the Open University (OU), Heerlen (The Netherlands), Jheronimus Academy of Data Science (JADS) of the division Smart Cities, ‘s-Hertogenbosch (The Netherlands), Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm (Sweden) and A. Mickiewicz University, Poznan (Poland). He is member of editorial/advisory boards of more than 30 journals. According to the RePec list he belongs to the top-30 of well-known economists world-wide. He is also a fellow of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences, and past vice-president of this organization. He has served as president of the governing board of the Netherlands Research Council (NWO). In 1996, he was awarded the most prestigious scientific prize in the Netherlands, the Spinoza award
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Interests: creative industries; urban development; cultural heritage; digital technology; strategic performance management
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Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Cities are engines of economic progress. But they also shape conditions for social capital and human well-being. The role of cities in modern times has become more prominent as a result of the world-wide rise in urbanisation, which has induced the rise of more and bigger cities (the so-called ‘New Urban World’). Clearly, cities are also under stress, seen from the perspective of poverty, environmental quality or crime. Cities in the ‘urban century’ (UN) are a melting pot of conflicting interests.
In recent years, we have witnessed a rising interest in ‘happy cities’. These are cities which have created favourable conditions (e.g., good quality of life, attractive neighbourhoods, accessible public space, community feeling) that are a stimulus for residents’ happiness. Interesting examples can be found in the ‘geography of happiness’, the ‘economics of happiness’, the ‘social psychology of happiness’, and so forth. The quantitative study of ‘happy cities’ is becoming a rich source of new ideas and conceptualisations on modern city life and deserves more prominent attention in the international literature.
In addition to ‘happy cities’, we also see an increasing popularity of ‘healthy cities’. These are cities which offer sound environmental conditions (e.g., liveability, air and water quality, green spaces, safe neighbourhoods, climate neutral production and consumption, virus-resistant cities) that favour individual and group well-being (mentally and physically). The recent literature shows a rising interest in the conditions for – and impacts of – healthy cities, often in relation to the emerging need for urban climate adaptation strategies.
The special issue of Sustainability on ‘Happy and Healthy Cities’ aims to generate a collection of evidence-based – preferably quantitative – studies on ‘Happy and Healthy Cities’. In addition to general critical review papers, the special issue welcomes original and cross-disciplinary papers, either as origin analytical case studies or as comparative studies, on the drivers and impacts of urban happiness and health. Policy studies addressing urban sustainability and resilience challenges in relation to happiness and health in cities deserves also a place in this special issue. Papers may address cities in both the developed and in the developing world.
Prof. Peter Nijkamp
Dr. Karima Kourtit
Dr. Marina Toger
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- economics of happiness
- geography of happiness
- healthy cities
- wellbeing
- liveability of cities
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