Envisioning Happy Places for All: A Systematic Review of the Impact of Transformations in the Urban Environment on the Wellbeing of Vulnerable Groups
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- To clarify whether and how urban planning and design interventions impact the psychological wellbeing of vulnerable groups;
- (2)
- To investigate vulnerable groups’ experiences and perceptions of the process of transformation in the urban environment, particularly with regards to the experience of participation and involvement.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Protocol and Registration
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
- Population: Vulnerable groups, based on United Nation criteria, which included children, women, older people, people with functional limitations, people with low socioeconomic status, racial minority groups, and migrants. These categories did not form part of the search string, but were used during study selection;
- Intervention (exposure): Studies were included if they (a) described one or more urban intervention (i.e., change in planning or design of the urban environment as opposed to describing the status quo of urban design), and (b) were based in urban areas as opposed to rural, natural, or wild areas;
- Comparison: It was anticipated that there would be limited availability of controlled studies in this area. However, should controlled studies be found, we would use urban areas or groups where the intervention had not been carried out as a comparator
- Outcome: Psychological wellbeing or any related psychological status. Given the interchangeability with which happiness and psychological wellbeing are used in the literature, as discussed in the introduction, we adopted here a broad definition [8] to encompass both direct and indirect measures of “being psychologically well” in the community. In particularly, we considered as eligible any studies that provided a measure related to sense of belonging or agency in the community.
- Study Design: Observational studies (quantitative or qualitative), controlled studies, case studies.
2.3. Search
2.4. Study Selection and Data Collection
2.5. Risk of Bias of Individual Studies
2.6. Synthesis of Results
3. Results
3.1. Selection of Studies
3.2. Study Characteristics
3.3. Intervention Approaches
3.3.1. Interventions with a Comprehensive Approach
3.3.2. Interventions with a Focused Approach
3.4. Risk of Bias
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Intervention Approach | Intervention Type | Outcome(s) | Study |
---|---|---|---|
Comprehensive | Neighbourhood regeneration via development of housing and roads | Belonging and agency–Residential satisfaction (ad-hoc measure) | [40] |
Community regeneration through housing redevelopment with refurbishment or demolition of buildings; refurbishing of public spaces | Belonging and agency (perceived social exclusion, ad-hoc measure) | [44] | |
Ecological urban renewal: community-designed street murals, public benches, planter boxes, information kiosks with bulletin boards, trellises for hanging gardens, all positioned in the public right-of-way. | Depression (CESD-11), Wellbeing (SF-36), Social capital as measure of belonging (ad-hoc measure) | [47] | |
Urban regeneration projects including creation of community gardens and bike paths and the redevelopment of brownfields, as well as housing revitilisation | Belonging and agency (unclear definition) | [36] | |
Neighbourhood regeneration via development of housing and roads | Belonging and agency–Residential satisfaction (ad-hoc measure) | [40] | |
Focused | Green spaces | Agency-Satisfaction with the availability and ‘quality of neighbourhood resources’ | [41] * |
Belonging-Relational wellbeing (behavioural observation) | [46] | ||
Mental wellbeing (Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale) Stress (Perceived Stress Scale) Agency-Satisfaction with neighbourhood quality of life (ad hoc measure). | [48] | ||
Transport infrastructure | Agency-Satisfaction with the availability and ‘quality of neighbourhood resources’ | [41] * | |
Mental wellbeing: Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale; SF-8 | [43] | ||
Agency-Residents’ satisfaction. | [45] | ||
Security | Agency-Perceived safety | [42] |
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Cassarino, M.; Shahab, S.; Biscaya, S. Envisioning Happy Places for All: A Systematic Review of the Impact of Transformations in the Urban Environment on the Wellbeing of Vulnerable Groups. Sustainability 2021, 13, 8086. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13148086
Cassarino M, Shahab S, Biscaya S. Envisioning Happy Places for All: A Systematic Review of the Impact of Transformations in the Urban Environment on the Wellbeing of Vulnerable Groups. Sustainability. 2021; 13(14):8086. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13148086
Chicago/Turabian StyleCassarino, Marica, Sina Shahab, and Sara Biscaya. 2021. "Envisioning Happy Places for All: A Systematic Review of the Impact of Transformations in the Urban Environment on the Wellbeing of Vulnerable Groups" Sustainability 13, no. 14: 8086. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13148086
APA StyleCassarino, M., Shahab, S., & Biscaya, S. (2021). Envisioning Happy Places for All: A Systematic Review of the Impact of Transformations in the Urban Environment on the Wellbeing of Vulnerable Groups. Sustainability, 13(14), 8086. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13148086