Informal settlements and a relational view of health in Nairobi, Kenya: sanitation, gender and dignity

December 9, 2014 · 0 comments

Informal settlements and a relational view of health in Nairobi, Kenya: sanitation, gender and dignity. Health Promo Intl, Nov 2014.

Jason Corburn1,* and Irene Karanja2. 1City and Regional Planning, UC Berkeley, 228 Wurster Hall, Berkeley, CA, USA 2Muungano Support Trust, Nairobi, Kenya. E-mail: jcorburn@berkeley.edu

On an urban planet, slums or informal settlements present an increasing challenge for health promotion. The living conditions in complex informal settlements interact with how people navigate through their daily lives and political institutions to shape health inequities. In this article, we suggest that only a relational place-based characterization of informal settlements can accurately capture the forces contributing to existing urban health inequities and inform appropriate and effective health promotion interventions.

We explore our relational framework using household survey, spatial mapping and qualitative focus group data gathered in partnership with residents and non-governmental organizations in the Mathare informal settlement in Nairobi, Kenya. All data interpretation included participation with local residents and organizations. We focus on the inter-relationships between inadequate sanitation and disease, social, economic and human rights for women and girls, who we show are most vulnerable from poor slum infrastructure.

We suggest that this collaborative process results in co-produced insights about the meanings and relationships between infrastructure, security, resilience and health. We conclude that complex informal settlements require relational and context-specific data gathering and analyses to understand the multiple determinants of health and to inform appropriate and effective healthy city interventions.

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