Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1049044 | Health & Place | 2007 | 6 Pages |
Adapting methodology from resilience theory in ecology, we develop an empirical model of the response of the New York City public health ecosystem to sudden disaster. Contrary to cultural expectation, ‘good’ and ‘bad’ neighborhoods—starkly differentiated by public health status reflecting longstanding economic and racial segregation—respond similarly to challenge. This suggests that the difference in health between neighborhoods is primarily predicated on the extent to which they have been, and continue to be, exposed to differing patterns of stressors and affordances, rather than to any difference in underlying socio-economic vulnerability. Paradoxically, then, these urban neighborhoods constitute a single, highly interdependent, health ecosystem, despite substantial socioeconomic and racial segregation.