Abstract

This case study investigates the connections among urban planning, governance and dengue fever in an emerging market context in the Global South. Key informant interviews were conducted with leading figures in public health, urban planning and governance in the planned city of Putrajaya, Malaysia. Drawing on theories of urban political ecology and ecosocial epidemiology, the qualitative study found the health of place – expressed as dengue-bearing mosquitoes and dengue fever in human bodies in the urban environment – was influenced by the place of health in a hierarchy of urban priorities.

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