Publication year: 2012Source:Social Science & Medicine, Volume 75, Issue 7Jeffrey R. Masuda, Cheryl Teelucksingh, Tara Zupancic, Alexis Crabtree, Rebecca Haber, Emily Skinner, Blake Poland, Jim Frankish, Mara Fridell In this paper, we report the results of a three-year research project (2008?2011) that aimed to identify urban environmental health inequities using a photography-mediated qualitative approach adapted for comparative neighbourhood-level assessment. The project took place in Vancouver, Toronto, and Winnipeg, Canada and involved a total of 49 inner city community researchers who compared environmental health conditions in numerous neighbourhoods across each city. Using the social determinants of health as a guiding framework, community researchers observed a wide range of differences in health-influencing private and public spaces, including sanitation services, housing, parks and gardens, art displays, and community services. The comparative process enabled community researchers to articulate in five distinct ways how such observable conditions represented system level inequities
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Out of our inner city backyards: Re-scaling urban environmental health?
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