Urban planning and public policy responses to the management of COVID-19 in Ghana
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Date
2021
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
The global COVID-19 pandemic, with its associated issues of isolation, enhanced hygiene
practices and contact tracing brought up a number of issues to the public domain, many of
which bordered on the nexus between urban planning and public health. This paper sets out to
examine how new ideas concerning the linkages between urban planning and public health
revealed by the COVID-19 pandemic can be integrated into practice, moving forward; and how
we might leverage on the crisis to build more just, healthier and liveable cities. Through
a review of the literature on public policy responses to pandemics, it is observed that the
current urban planning system in Ghana leaves so many people behind and exposes the lives
of many to current and future disease pandemics. We propose an agenda for transformation
which revolves around the co-evolution and co-creation of new forms of societal values that
are less materialistic and individualistic but rather more egalitarian.
Description
This article is published by Taylor & Francis, 2021 and is also available at https://doi.org/10.1080/23748834.2021.1876392
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Citation
CITIES & HEALTH 2021, VOL. 5, NO. S1, S280–S294