Gandy Matthew
Int J Urban Reg Res. 2022 Mar;46(2):202-219. doi: 10.1111/1468-2427.13080. Epub 2021 Dec 7.
In the context of the Covid-19 pandemic this article takes a longer view of the evolving relationship between urbanization and the range of zoonotic diseases that have spread from animals to humans. I suggest that the existing interpretation of epidemiological transitions remains overly Eurocentric and requires a more nuanced conception of global environmental history. Similarly, the conceptualization of urban space within these teleological schemas has relied on a narrow range of examples and has failed to fully engage with networked dimensions to urbanization. At an analytical level I consider the potential for extending the conceptual framework offered by urban political ecology to take greater account of the epidemiological dimensions to contemporary urbanization and its associated pandemic imaginary. I examine how contemporary health threats intersect with complex patterns of environmental change, including the destruction of biodiversity (and trade in live animals), the co-evolutionary dynamics of viruses and other pathogens, and wider dimensions to the global technosphere, including food production, infrastructure networks, and the shifting topographies of peri- or ex-urban contact zones.
在新冠疫情的背景下,本文对城市化与从动物传播到人类的一系列人畜共患疾病之间不断演变的关系进行了更长远的审视。我认为,现有的流行病学转变解释仍然过于以欧洲为中心,需要一个更细致入微的全球环境史概念。同样,这些目的论模式中的城市空间概念化依赖于有限的例子,未能充分涉及城市化的网络化维度。在分析层面,我考虑了扩展城市政治生态学所提供的概念框架的可能性,以更充分地考虑当代城市化的流行病学维度及其相关的大流行想象。我研究了当代健康威胁如何与复杂的环境变化模式相互交织,包括生物多样性的破坏(以及活体动物贸易)、病毒和其他病原体的共同进化动态,以及全球技术圈的更广泛维度,包括粮食生产、基础设施网络,以及城郊或城市边缘接触区不断变化的地形。