<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0870-9025</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Revista Portuguesa de Saúde Pública]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Rev. Port. Sau. Pub.]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0870-9025</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0870-90252013000100007</article-id>
<article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.1016/j.rpsp.2013.05.006</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[On becoming healthier communities: Poverty, territorial development and planning]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="pt"><![CDATA[Como tornar as comunidades mais saudáveis: pobreza, desenvolvimento do território e planeamento]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Henriques]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[José Manuel]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,University Institute of Lisbon Higher Institute of Business and Labour Sciences ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[Lisbon ]]></addr-line>
<country>Portugal</country>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>01</month>
<year>2013</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>01</month>
<year>2013</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>31</volume>
<numero>1</numero>
<fpage>58</fpage>
<lpage>73</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0870-90252013000100007&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0870-90252013000100007&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0870-90252013000100007&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[Healthy communities seek to improve the health of their citizens as a central aim of development policies and develop possibilities for health related ‘economic integration’. They depend strongly on Municipal initiative in animating cross-sectoral policy integration and empowering civil society. Contemporary conditions require ‘social innovation’ depending on central paradigm shifts in science, in moving beyond ‘deprivation-oriented’ anti-poverty action, in linking health to territorial development and in developing adequate planning approaches. This paper discusses the above mentioned paradigm shifts, illustrates possibilities of action and suggests the possibility of ‘learning from practice’ based on the experience of the WHO Healthy Cities Movement.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="pt"><p><![CDATA[Comunidades saudáveis promovem a saúde dos cidadãos como objetivo central das suas políticas de desenvolvimento e desenvolvem formas saudáveis de ‘integração económica’. Dependem fortemente da iniciativa municipal na criação de condições para a integração territorial de políticas públicas e promovendo o empowerment da sociedade civil. As condições contemporâneas requerem inovação social dependente de mudanças paradigmáticas centrais nas ciências, na perspetivação do combate à pobreza para além da resposta à privação, na relação entre saúde e desenvolvimento territorial e na adopção de abordagens adequadas de planeamento. Este artigo discute as mudanças paradigmáticas atrás enunciadas, ilustra possibilidades de ação na promoção da saúde e sugere a possibilidade de ‘aprender com a prática’ com base na experiência e dos resultados da Rede das Cidades Saudáveis promovida pela OMS.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Healthy communities]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Social determinants of health]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Health inequities]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Anti-poverty action]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Territorial development]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Learning from practice]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Comunidades saudáveis]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Determinantes sociais da saúde]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Desigualdades em saúde]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Ações anti-pobreza]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Devenvolvimento do território]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Aprendizagem pela prática]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[ <P align="right"><b>ARTIGOS ORIGINAIS</b></P>     <P><b>On becoming healthier communities: Poverty, territorial development and  planning</b></P>     <P><b>Como tornar as comunidades mais saud&aacute;veis: pobreza, desenvolvimento do  territ&oacute;rio e planeamento</b></P>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><b>Jos&eacute; Manuel Henriques<SUP>a</SUP> </b></P>     <P><SUP>a</SUP>Higher Institute of Business and Labour Sciences, University  Institute of Lisbon (ISCTE–IUL), Lisbon, Portugal</P>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><B>ABSTRACT</B></P>     <P>Healthy communities seek to improve the health of their citizens as a central  aim of development policies and develop possibilities for health related  ‘economic integration’. They depend strongly on Municipal initiative in  animating cross–sectoral policy integration and empowering civil society.  Contemporary conditions require ‘social innovation’ depending on central  paradigm shifts in science, in moving beyond ‘deprivation–oriented’ anti–poverty  action, in linking health to territorial development and in developing adequate  planning approaches. This paper discusses the above mentioned paradigm shifts,  illustrates possibilities of action and suggests the possibility of ‘learning  from practice’ based on the experience of the WHO Healthy Cities Movement.</P>     <P><B>Keywords: </B>Healthy communities. Social determinants of health. Health inequities.  Anti–poverty action. Territorial development. Learning from practice. </P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><B>RESUMO</B></P>     <P>Comunidades saud&aacute;veis promovem a sa&uacute;de dos cidad&atilde;os como objetivo central das  suas pol&iacute;ticas de desenvolvimento e desenvolvem formas saud&aacute;veis de ‘integra&ccedil;&atilde;o  econ&oacute;mica’. Dependem fortemente da iniciativa municipal na cria&ccedil;&atilde;o de condi&ccedil;&otilde;es  para a integra&ccedil;&atilde;o territorial de pol&iacute;ticas p&uacute;blicas e promovendo o  <I>empowerment</I> da sociedade civil. As condi&ccedil;&otilde;es contempor&acirc;neas requerem  inova&ccedil;&atilde;o social dependente de mudan&ccedil;as paradigm&aacute;ticas centrais nas ci&ecirc;ncias, na  perspetiva&ccedil;&atilde;o do combate &agrave; pobreza para al&eacute;m da resposta &agrave; priva&ccedil;&atilde;o, na rela&ccedil;&atilde;o  entre sa&uacute;de e desenvolvimento territorial e na adop&ccedil;&atilde;o de abordagens adequadas  de planeamento. Este artigo discute as mudan&ccedil;as paradigm&aacute;ticas atr&aacute;s enunciadas,  ilustra possibilidades de a&ccedil;&atilde;o na promo&ccedil;&atilde;o da sa&uacute;de e sugere a possibilidade de  ‘aprender com a pr&aacute;tica’ com base na experi&ecirc;ncia e dos resultados da Rede das  Cidades Saud&aacute;veis promovida pela OMS.</P>     <P><B>Palavras-chave: </B>Comunidades saud&aacute;veis. Determinantes sociais da sa&uacute;de. Desigualdades em  sa&uacute;de. A&ccedil;&otilde;es anti–pobreza. Devenvolvimento do territ&oacute;rio. Aprendizagem pela  pr&aacute;tica. </P>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><B>Context</B></P>     <P>Communities <I>become healthier</I> when local governance institutions are  able to combine local initiative and organizational capacity with cross-sectoral  action and community involvement tackling local conditions and structural causes  of ‘social determinants’. Communities <I>become healthier</I> as people are  empowered to develop critical awareness concerning the avoidable causes of  ill-health and are prepared to change attitudes and behaviour concerning their  own lifestyles. Communities <I>become healthier</I> when their members increase  the control over the factors that relate local conditions to the ‘social  determinants’ of their own health.</P>     <P>The Health 2020 policy framework proposes, as one of its four priority areas,  the creation of supportive environments and resilient communities. This is based  on the assumption that people's opportunities for a healthy life are closely  linked to the conditions in which they are born, grow, work and age:  “<I>Resilient and empowered communities respond proactively to new or adverse  situations, prepare for economic, social and environmental change and cope  better with crisis and hardship</I>”.<sup>1</sup>‘Social inequities’ in health  are related with <I>unfair</I> and <I>avoidable</I> differences in health status  across groups in society stressing those that result from the uneven  distribution of ‘social determinants’. ‘Social determinants’ of health and  ‘health inequities’ are amenable to change through policy and governance  interventions.</P>     <P>On the other hand, WHO recognizes poverty as a key factor in explaining  poorer levels of health: “Poverty is a key factor in explaining poorer levels of  health between the most and least well-off countries and population groups  within the same country. Yet differences in health also follow a strong social  gradient. This reflects an individual or population group's position in society,  which translates in differential access to, and security of, resources, such as  education, employment, housing, as well as differential levels of participation  in civic society and control over life”.<sup>2</sup></P>     <P>Poverty related ‘health inequities’ are becoming more difficult to tackle.  Poverty is an expanding phenomenon in Europe and contemporary crisis conditions  are contributing to reveal how poverty is becoming more complex. Poverty is  currently exhibiting increasingly diversified concrete manifestations. As  poverty is <I>lived</I> in particular places and its manifestations become  concrete in spatially diversified and local specific contexts, anti-poverty  action has an unavoidable local dimension but cannot remain a local issue.  Actually, lasting changes at local level require specific anti-poverty action  having <I>both</I> a <I>local</I> and a <I>non-local</I> dimension. Poverty  eradication requires societal change given its structural nature.</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>Contemporary crisis conditions are contributing to clarifying the  <I>limits</I> of current understandings in public policies and how adequate  action is depending on ‘social innovation’ and central paradigm shifts. As was  already politically recognized, reformulation of conventional economic, social  and spatial policies is required if significant changes should be achieved in  the European context of poverty. Therefore, poverty is best understood as a  <I>development</I> problem requiring <I>policy integration</I> at different  <I>territorial levels</I> and the search for <I>new institutional and  organizational models</I> for <I>specific</I> anti-poverty action.</P>     <P>Municipalities can play a key role in making this understanding concrete and  in tackling poverty related ‘health inequities’ in improving healthy  communities. This paper aims at clarifying some critical epistemological,  conceptual and theoretical aspects involving the potential contribution of  Municipalities in incorporating these kinds of challenges in current territorial  planning. Territorial planning is a future oriented activity whose theoretical  object remains on <I>linking</I> scientific knowledge to action in the public  domain aiming at social transformation.<sup>3</sup></P>     <P>Thus, the central problem guiding this paper can be stated as follows: how  can Municipalities improve healthy communities focusing on poverty related  ‘health inequities’ in territorial planning for local development?</P>     <P>This paper will develop a contribution to this challenge by discussing five  central domains of paradigm shifts with direct implication in designing,  implementing and managing action.</P>     <P>First, the relation between poverty-related health inequities and social  determinants of health in improving healthy communities will be introduced.  Second, a scientific paradigm shift enabling the production of knowledge on  <I>non-observable</I> ‘conditions of possibility’ for emancipation and social  transformation will be presented. Third, a paradigm shift from  ‘deprivation-oriented’ income support of poor households to the creation of  health-related ‘economic integration’ in meeting human needs beyond consumption,  market-dependency and the role of the health care system will be proposed.</P>     <P>Fourth, a paradigm shift in linking health to territorial development beyond  consumption-oriented approaches to meeting human needs will be discussed. Fifth,  a paradigm shift in planning will be presented and the implication for planners  in choosing methods and tools will be introduced. Sixth, some examples will be  presented as a contribution to illustrate possibilities of widening Municipal  action in improving ‘healthy communities’. The examples are taken from action  stemming from different contexts in order to overcome the <I>absence,  insufficiency or unsuitability</I> of current responses in dealing with  contemporary challenges. Finally, some conditions for ‘social innovation’ are  discussed and the opportunity to learn from practice developed in the framework  of the WHO Healthy Cities Movement is proposed.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><B>Healthy communities: focusing on poverty-related ‘health  inequities’</B></P>     <P>The ‘healthy communities’ approach is supposed to play a central role in  achieving human development in the twenty-first century. The literature in the  field emphasizes ‘healthy communities’ as a process, not a status. A healthy  community is one that seeks to improve the health of its citizens by putting  health high on the social and political agenda. Healthy communities are about  the process that enables people to improve their health through applying the  concepts and principles of health promotion at the local level. The WHO  Commission on Social Determinants of Health recognizes its potential as a new  approach to development. Health and health equity may not be the aim of all  public policies but they will definitively be a fundamental result. As  recognized by the Commission, without appropriate public policies to ensure  fairness in the way benefits are distributed, growth can bring little benefit to  health equity.<sup>4</sup></P>     <P>As stated by the WHO, traditionally, societies looked to the health sector to  deal with its concerns about health and disease. And, certainly, misdistribution  of health care, not delivering care to those who most need it, is one of the  social determinants of health. Good medical care plays a central role in the  well-being of populations. But improved clinical medical care is <I>no</I>t  enough to meet the challenges of today and to overcome health  inequities.<sup>5</sup></P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>Without action on ‘social determinants’ it will not be possible to meet the  challenge of reducing chronic diseases such as cardiovascular diseases, cancer  or diabetes. Chronic diseases are growing in countries that also face unsolved  infectious epidemics. The major illness problems as well as ill-health  responsible for avoidable premature loss of life are strongly related with the  conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work, and age. Thus, health  inequities can be overcome.</P>     <P>Furthermore, given the interdependency between biological, psychological and  socio-economic dimensions of life, health is <I>not</I> independent from mental  health. As health can be defined as the possibility to develop a positive and  autonomous attitude towards life, illness associates some form of suffering with  a social behaviour relating to the social construction of the concept of  illness.<SUP>6</SUP> On the other hand, <I>becoming ill</I> is a  context-dependent process as only concrete persons get ill. Illness only becomes  real in the context of structural, material and social constraints that human  beings and communities face. The socio-psychosomatic dimensions of ill-health  are real.<SUP>7</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>8</SUP> The potential failure of immune  systems cannot be overlooked. Anxiety, stress and depression can interfere with  their performance (loss of hope, job instability and insecurity, absence of  appropriate social welfare in response to long-term unemployment,  etc.).<SUP>9</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>10</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>11</SUP></P>     <P>Healthy communities are based on a holistic understanding of health and on an  <I>agency</I> perspective of community action. Municipalities are supposed to  play a central role building local governance (cross-sectoral health-related  policy integration), community involvement and empowerment of civil  society.<SUP>12</SUP> People are supposed to <I>become</I> increasingly enabled  to take control of the factors (‘social determinants’ of health) that determine  their well-being and their health.</P>     <P>‘Social determinants’ of health are the conditions in which people are born,  grow up, live, work and age.<SUP>2</SUP> These conditions influence a person's  opportunity to be healthy, his or her risk of illness and life expectancy. And  action on the ‘social determinants’ of health must involve the state, civil  society and local communities. Policies and programmes must involve all the key  sectors of society, not just the health sector. Health sector authorities can  promote a ‘social determinants’ of health approach at the highest level policy  decision-making. They can disseminate information about ‘good practice’  illustrating ‘<I>how it can be done’</I> and they contribute to develop public  policies that promote health equity.</P>     <P>Action on the ‘social determinants’ focuses on the processes that enable  people to increase control over their health following the concepts and  principles of health promotion at the local level.<SUP>13</SUP> Modifiable risk  factors for chronic illness such as poor diets, alcohol abuse or smoking cannot  be reduced to individual choices alone. Institutions as well as poverty  interfere with the individual and collective subjective perceptions that may  favour, or not, ‘healthy lifestyles’. Action on ‘social determinants’ has to  tackle the underlying social conditions that make people in poverty more  vulnerable in line with the perspective of the WHO Commission on Social  Determinants of Health): “<I>The causes of these lifestyle causes of poor health  reside in the social, legal and political context broadly  conceived</I>”.<SUP>14</SUP></P>     <P>As introduced above, poverty related ‘health inequities’ are becoming more  difficult to tackle. In a context of high unemployment and cut-backs in public  expenses, anti-poverty action involves particular challenges. It is still  impossible to accurately predict all the repercussions that the present crisis  in the international financial system and the global economy combined with  national austerity policies will have on poverty, employment and state based  social protection. Increasing difficulties facing businesses, dropping local  demand as result of recession and stiffer international competition are giving  rise to concerns about increasing and lasting high unemployment eventually  reinforced by austerity policies strictly oriented to short term structural  adjustment. Many examples of common insecure conditions can be highlighted:  insecure employment, precariousness resulting from labour market deregulation  and liberalization, frequent periods of short-term unemployment or long-term  unemployment, irregular migration, exposition to negative or stigmatizing  attitudes, rapidly changing welfare provision, etc.</P>     <P>In this context, given the interdependency between health and mental health,  poverty related ‘health inequities’ are becoming increasingly complex. For  example, insecurity and powerlessness combined with bad quality food and spatial  concentration in deprived neighbourhoods increase vulnerability to disease.  Decreasing access to health services and adequate medical care cannot compensate  this kind of vulnerability. Children miss routine vaccinations and illiteracy  blockades access to information about health risks. Concerning chronic diseases,  poverty creates ill-health as, for example, experiences in utero and in the  early years associated with low family socioeconomic position at birth are  linked to increased risk of obesity and cardio-vascular disease in adult  life.<SUP>15</SUP> Evidence shows that poor people are more likely to report  depression, asthma, diabetes, high blood pressure and heart attacks related with  higher levels of obesity and also cancer or high cholesterol (poor people are  less likely to have regular preventive care, screening tests, blood tests,  etc.).<SUP>16</SUP></P>     <P>Healthy communities are very much context and time dependent.<SUP>17</SUP>  Improving healthy communities in the years to come will be very different from  how it was done in the industrializing cities of the nineteenth century. As the  major determinants of health are to be found beyond the health sector, issues  such as inter-sectorial partnerships, cross-sectoral policy integration, healthy  community coalitions, local government's involvement or paradigm shifts in the  debate about the relations between health and <I>development</I> will see their  relevance increase.</P>     <P>Therefore, Municipalities improving healthy communities require the capacity  of producing knowledge about the root causes of health inequities and designing  the possibility of tackling them at local level. They require the improvement of  the health of their citizens as the central aim of development policies. They  focus on the processes that enable people to increase control over their health  following the concepts and principles of health promotion at the local  level.<SUP>17</SUP></P>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P><B>A paradigm shift in scien ‘reality’ and ‘conditions of possibility’ for  social change</B></P>     <P>The debate on an eventual paradigm shift in science has a central relevance  for healthy communities.<SUP>9</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>18</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>19</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>20</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>21</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>22</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>23</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>24</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>25</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>26</SUP> Healthy communities aim at  increasing control over ‘social determinants’ of health and this requires the  capacity of producing knowledge about the root causes of ‘health inequities’ and  designing the possibility of tackling them at local level. <I>Searching for  possibilities</I> may well require the observation of existing realities  actively made <I>invisible</I> by hegemonic epistemological, conceptual and  theoretical assumptions. On the other hand, s<I>earching for possibilities</I>  may still <I>not</I> have empiric evidence. <I>Searching for possibilities  requires</I> that knowledge has to be produced on the basis of the  identification of ‘causal powers’ that may lead to <I>possible</I> empirical  manifestations and of the conditions that may facilitate the activation of these  ‘causal powers’.</P>     <P>Action on ‘social determinants’ as well as action on ‘health inequities’ may  have to be based on adequate knowledge about the causes of their underlying  context-dependency. Action may also have to include the linking of this  knowledge to the building of critical awareness and collective action in  changing living conditions.</P>     <P>The crisis of the hegemonic paradigm <I>cannot</I> be ignored. Even if it is  still not possible to identify an alternative and coherent emerging paradigm it  is possible to identify <I>crucial issues</I> and show the <I>direction</I> of  recent developments. This contributed elsewhere to the attempt to make explicit  how a <I>possible response</I> could be found within the framework of a  ‘critical’ realist epistemology.<SUP>27</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>28</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>29</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>30</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>31</SUP></P>     <P>Poverty related health inequities and health related anti-poverty action is a  domain of research where a number of critical issues are directly linked to the  crisis of the hegemonic paradigm. Action in this field touches the  interdependence between the natural and the social sciences. Poverty is about  human suffering and unmet human needs are at the basis of experienced ill-health  and lack of autonomy. Overcoming poverty and meeting needs have both biological  and social dimensions (health, food and nutrition, shelter and housing, etc.).  As overcoming poverty leads us to the analysis of human needs, even if we may  concentrate on the social and economic aspects of this change, we must  <I>not</I> forget this underlying critical dimension of human  specificity.<SUP>32</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>33</SUP></P>     <P>In tackling poverty related health inequities, action-oriented knowledge is  specific as the concreteness of poverty related ‘social determinants’ of health  are context-dependent. The complexity, spatial diversity and local uniqueness of  poverty related health inequities call for the context-dependent concreteness of  action. Knowledge based on laws, formal causality and generalization of observed  regularities is of little help in designing unique ‘<I>projects of hope’</I> for  particular individuals, households or groups or in designing ‘<I>strategic  visions’</I> for communities in localities or regions. The multidimensionality  of poverty related health inequities has to be understood in its  <I>wholeness</I>. To know about the relation between poverty and ill-health is  to know about how poor people live and experience those problems the <I>non-poor  identify</I> as poverty problems. A ‘division of reality’ based on scientific  disciplines does not help to reconstitute the complexity of experienced  life.</P>     <P>The substantive content of anti-poverty action is <I>not</I> independent from  the way the ‘<I>object’</I> of action is approached. If anti-poverty action is  conceived as dealing with experienced problems of real people, facing unmet  basic-needs in real places, to which they are historically tied by cognitive and  affective bonds, or to which they are determined to belong, the  ‘<I>subject-object’</I> relation becomes a relation <I>between subjects</I>. In  anti-poverty action, the role of planners cannot be dissociated from a relation  between subjects aiming at emancipation and empowerment.</P>     <P>Health related anti-poverty action is also about interaction between planning  agents and other social agents either for the purpose of controlling some  undesirable change or for the purpose of enabling action aiming at some  desirable change. In anti-poverty action, planning agents call for scientific  support searching for practical adequateness (eradicating or mitigating poverty,  tackling social determinants of health and health inequities, etc.). But, the  other social agents develop their strategies on the basis of common sense  knowledge. Scientific knowledge may face sterility in anti-poverty action if not  ‘<I>(re)translated</I>’ into common sense knowledge in order to make interaction  and dialogue possible. ‘Reformulation’ in non-directive psychotherapy can be  seen as an interesting example<SUP>34</SUP> in meeting this challenge.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><B>A paradigm shift in anti-poverty action: ‘economic integration’ of poor  households beyond employment and ‘deprivation-oriented’ welfare policies</B></P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>The complexity of poverty and anti-poverty action has to be explicitly  addressed. Poverty is not only a major ‘social determinant’ of health. Poverty  is in itself the very difficulty of meeting the existential conditions for the  avoidance of ill-health.</P>     <P>In contemporary crisis conditions, rising unemployment combined with  shortcomings in welfare policies are contributing to emphasize the limits of  reducing anti-poverty action to deprivation oriented income support. This is  particularly the case when action focuses on poverty related ‘health inequities’  and on health related ‘economic integration’. This involves action beyond the  role of health care systems and represents a major challenge in practice.  Dealing with ‘economic integration’, understood as the ‘economic’ dimension of  anti-poverty action, involves a paradigm shift in action. Explicit reformulation  is needed involving values, concepts and theories informing action.</P>     <P><I>Deprivation, poverty and unmet needs</I></P>     <P>In European contemporary conditions, the understanding of poverty  <I>cannot</I> be restricted to low income alone. This has been analyzed  elsewhere with detail.<SUP>30</SUP> Poverty was conceptualized as a situation of  <I>unmet basic-needs</I> (ill health and lack of autonomy)<SUP>35</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>36</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>37</SUP> which emerges as the outcome of a  process by means of which <I>unmet intermediate needs</I> (food, housing,  medical care, etc.) are related with <I>insufficiency of resources</I> (material  or non material) in a given <I>discursive-organizational</I> context.</P>     <P>Understood as absolute poverty, poverty was defined as the inability to  mobilize <I>material</I> and <I>non-material</I> means to create <I>synergic  satisfiers</I> to <I>meet intermediate needs</I> and avoid ill-health and lack  of autonomy. This inability is the result of the <I>failure</I> of  <I>constituting purposeful agency</I> in a relational context defined by a  <I>discursive field</I> marked by <I>hegemony</I> and an <I>organizational  field</I> characterized by <I>organizational outflanking</I><SUP>38</SUP> of the  poor.</P>     <P>This leads to a clearer understanding why poverty <I>cannot</I> result from  <I>low income</I> alone. Poverty may be related to a complex  <I>interdependency</I> between <I>detachment</I> from production (lack of money,  lack of productive tools for self-consumption, etc.), lack of <I>cognitive</I>  skills (relevant knowledge, strategic information, etc.), weakened  <I>affective</I> conditions (isolation and rupture of interpersonal relations,  lack of collective organization, etc.) and blocking <I>emotional</I> conditions  (anxiety, depression, loss of identity, etc.). This weakens the very  <I>possibility of hope</I> and the constitution of an <I>emancipatory  project</I> which could articulate individual and collective interests.</P>     <P>The expansion of poverty due to increasingly difficult access to money  resources should <I>not</I> cause <I>other</I> dimensions underlying unmet basic  needs to be overlooked. Precarious interpersonal relations or social isolation  may make material resources useless in the prevention of serious harm (lack of  hope, sense of powerlessness, psychological disorder, etc.).</P>     <P>Specifically for the purpose of this paper, other dimensions of intermediate  needs can be <I>abstracted</I> and attention may be focused on the role of  <I>unemployment</I>, <I>precariousness</I> and cut-backs in deprivation-oriented  state response in the way the substantive relations (whether necessary or  contingent) between <I>health</I> and <I>intermediate needs</I> such as  <I>housing</I>, <I>medical care, professional skills</I>, <I>critical  understanding</I> and <I>social relations</I> are constituted and can be related  with ‘social determinants’ of health and territorial development. The  <I>market-dependency</I> of meeting ‘intermediate needs’ due to society's  <I>commodification</I>, and <I>consumption-oriented</I> subjective  interpretation of <I>need</I> and <I>action</I>, are historical constructs, thus  <I>liable to change.</I></P>     <P>Therefore, the difference between the concept of ‘deprivation’ and the  concept of ‘poverty’ plays a critical relevance for anti-poverty  action.<SUP>39</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>40</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>41</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>42</SUP> Poverty was understood elsewhere defined as a state of  <I>deprivation</I> that results from <I>scarcity</I> or <I>insufficiency of  resources</I> in a <I>discursive-organizational context</I>.<SUP>30</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>43</SUP> As resources are functional to agents’ purposes, and power  was defined both as agent's access to resources and as its capacity to realize  specific purposes in a specific organizational-discursive relational context,  <I>agents’ purposes</I> become constitutive of the role played by the entities  that <I>become</I> resources.</P>     <P>That is the reason why the <I>exercise of power</I> is not independent from  the process by means of which resources are ‘constituted’. Thus, as both agents’  purposes and human action are <I>concept-dependent</I>, concepts play a role in  the constitution of the possibility to exercise power. Power is exercised over  resources on the basis of a <I>discursive-organizational</I> socially created  context. The very relevance, sense and meaning of resources become <I>both</I>  context-dependent and concept-dependent. Therefore, the materiality of resources  cannot be assessed <I>independently</I> of the purposes that <I>create</I>  resources as the means required for their fulfilment.</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>That is why the <I>institutional</I> discourses on poverty play a central  role. They establish the conceptual boundaries for the actual perception of the  problems felt by those in poverty as well as its causes. The poor find  themselves caught in a web of relations which they do <I>not</I> control.  <I>Others</I> produce <I>discourses</I> on poverty that define the very  conceptual boundaries in the context of which their problems are  <I>recognized</I>, <I>accepted</I> or <I>understood</I> as ‘poverty’.</P>     <P>Having in mind the rich debate about the relation between ‘relative’ and  ‘absolute’ poverty, poverty was introduced above as <I>absolute</I>  poverty.<SUP>44</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>45</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>46</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>47</SUP> Given the anti-poverty orientation of this paper, the  existential dimension of poverty has to be the focus of the conceptual and  theoretical debate. Anti-poverty action is about <I>changing</I> poor people's  lives.</P>     <P>Concerning the ‘<I>absolutist core</I>’ of the notion of poverty, a concept  of poverty can be built on a precise concept of <I>basic-need</I> with universal  validity. It was shown that an objective concept of basic-need was possible  without remaining a normative concept. Human needs have not been lately the  object of much attention in the social sciences. Nevertheless, there is a very  rich debate in the field which is very useful in conceptualizing poverty and  anti-poverty action.<SUP>48</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>49</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>50</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>51</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>52</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>53</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>54</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>55</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>56</SUP></P>     <P><I>Anti-poverty action and the ‘economic integration’ of poor  households</I></P>     <P>Accordingly, ‘economic integration’ was defined as <I>action</I> aimed at  processes of linking the <I>knowledge</I> about material conditions of unmet  basic needs with the kind of <I>material</I> transformation which may contribute  to anti-poverty effects, namely, through widening <I>possibilities</I> for  <I>decreasing market-dependency</I> in meeting intermediate needs and  <I>broadening possibilities for income earning</I> activities to decrease  dependency on working for a wage in the formal employment system (producing for  self-consumption and small-scale market production, centrality of human  relations in building solutions, creating associations and cooperatives,  team-starters in ‘inclusive entrepreneurship’ initiatives,  etc.<SUP>30</SUP>).</P>     <P>It was conceptualized as a process of meeting <I>intermediate</I> needs by  means of <I>creating</I> synergic satisfiers enabling the least possible  <I>market-dependency</I> and the highest possible <I>autonomy concerning  income-earning</I> activities not restricted to working for a wage in the formal  employment system. This process assumes conditions for wealth creation which  involve both <I>use</I> value and <I>exchange</I> value. This way of  understanding the substance of the ‘economic’ dimension of anti-poverty action  recovers long debates stemming from heterodox contributions in  Economics<SUP>57</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>58</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>59</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>60</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>61</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>62</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>63</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>64</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>65</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>66</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>67</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>68</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>69</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>70</SUP> as well as the discussion about  the potential pathogenic effect of the assumptions of the hegemonic paradigm in  Economics.<SUP>71</SUP></P>     <P>Given the <I>relational</I> understanding of human beings, the  <I>household</I> was seen as central in the ‘whole economy  model’<SUP>72</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>73</SUP> and its context-dependency and  territorial <I>embeddedness</I> in each locality was kept. The kind of lasting  contextual change enabling the ‘economic integration’ of poor households was  conceptualized as <I>local development</I>. The household offers the fundamental  relational setting of poor households as the basis of survival strategies. It  offers an opportunity for re-thinking economic relations relevant to the  ‘economic integration’ of poor people as they <I>connect</I> the household to  the extended family, neighbours, the market economy and civil and political  associations.</P>     <P>The ‘whole economy model’ focuses on the household's production of livelihood  because economic activities are <I>merged</I> with other life generating forces.  It permits an understanding of <I>wealth creation</I> both associated to <I>use  value</I> production and to <I>exchange value</I> creation and income-earning  activities. Use value production may involve both individual activities  (self-provisioning for food, building your own house or furniture, producing  your own clothes, etc.) as well as collective activities (associative  kindergartens, community health associations, collective building maintenance by  dwellers, etc.).</P>     <P>Income-earning activities may involve working for a wage and depend on the  opportunities offered to poor people by the formal employment system. These  opportunities are very context-dependent and are increasingly dependent on  pro-active agency in order to promote access to available jobs. That is the case  of building ‘pathways for employment and integration’.</P>     <P>Income-earning activities may also involve the mobilization of the potential  for entrepreneurship among poor households aimed at small-scale business  activities. ‘Inclusive entrepreneurship’, requires specific action. Besides the  provision of access to capital, ‘entrepreneurship’ in these cases may require  intensive animation, organizational and counselling efforts. This possibility is  <I>not</I> to be expected as primarily ‘<I>spontaneous’</I> and is understood as  being highly dependent on pro-active agency. It requires an adequate conceptual  and theoretical basis of action in understanding ‘<I>firms</I>’,  ‘<I>markets</I>’, ‘<I>competition’</I> and <I>adequate firm strategies</I> for  this kind of organizations.</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>These strategies assume that success is not dependent on any a-social,  automatic, or autonomous market mechanism. Low capital and abundant labour  require specific strategies in order to achieve adequate income (wages above  minimum wage, etc.). New and unique products, adequate technologies and  <I>non-price</I> factors are some of the aspects involved.<SUP>74</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>75</SUP></P>     <P>The realization of the potential for entrepreneurship is highly dependent  both on pro-active agency and on context. That is the case of <I>institutionally  built</I> economic circuits or <I>non-price</I> factors in marketing and  commercialization.</P>     <P>Accordingly, changes in the situation of individual poor households depend on  the occurrence of lasting changes in context. Given the context-dependency of  its concreteness, the concept of ‘economic integration’ also has a constitutive  <I>territorial</I> dimension. The ‘survival strategies’ of poor households are  heavily dependent on territorially <I>embedded social practices</I>.  Entrepreneurship as well as innovation are dependent on the territorial context.  Economic processes are <I>not</I> only <I>located</I> in space, they are  <I>embedded</I> in territory and its institutions.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><B>Territorial cohesion and a paradigm shift in territorial development:  ‘territorial disintegration’, ‘place-based’ initiative and organizational  capacity in controlling and mobilizing resources</B></P>     <P>As was seen above, the concreteness of poverty and ‘social determinants’ of  health is context-dependent. So are the lasting changes required by healthy  communities.</P>     <P>The kind of contextual change required for lasting changes to occur is being  understood here as <I>local initiative</I> for <I>territorial development</I>.  Thus, in this paper, <I>territorial</I> development is understood as the kind of  change in all local contexts that may lead to lasting prevention in poverty  related health inequities and ‘social determinants’ of health as well as lasting  health related ‘economic integration’ of poor households. Territorial  development recovers a rich tradition of reconstructing the very concept of  development as well as the basic-needs approach to  development.<SUP>76</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>77</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>78</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>79</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>80</SUP></P>     <P>Healthy communities require conditions for agency, local governance and  policy integration enabling cross-sectoral public action and community  involvement. On the other hand, if lasting changes in poverty situations may  depend on lasting changes in territorial context, this also involves the need of  further clarification concerning the relation between ‘health inequities’ and  ‘territorial disintegration’, and between the nature of ‘place-based’ approaches  and action-oriented territorial development. This is particularly relevant when  local initiative aiming at the ‘reversal’ of ‘territorial disintegration’  <I>cannot</I> be expected to occur <I>spontaneously</I>. Territory-based  capacity for initiative and organization is vital for mobilizing the ‘endogenous  potential’ of local communities to be used in the collective effort to fully  control and mobilize local resources.</P>     <P>Therefore, the improvement of ‘healthy communities’ may strongly depend on  Municipal initiative and organizational capacity in developing territorial  animation aiming at ‘reversing’ territorial disintegration processes. Building  agency and conditions for cross-sectoral policy integration, empowering civil  society and promoting animation for ‘economic integration’ (decreasing  market-dependency, enlarging the scope for income-earning activities, animating  the ‘whole’ real economy, etc.), Municipalities can aim at tackling poverty  related health inequities acting on ‘social determinants’ of health (access to  land for self-provisioning of healthy food, affordable and healthy housing,  creating conditions for cooperatives involving unemployed in urban regeneration  on deprived neighbourhoods, etc.).</P>     <P>The recognition of the importance of territory-based initiative and  organizational capacity for the full mobilization of resources is becoming  widely accepted in the context of current European thinking on the future of  territorial cohesion policy since the Lisbon Treaty was signed in  2007.<a href="#1"><SUP>1</SUP></a><a name="top1"></a> This represents a paradigm shift in understanding conditions  for regional development which offers new perspectives for local initiative and  territorial development action.</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P><I>Territorial development as an emergent paradigm</I></P>     <P>From the ‘spatial diffusion’ of development impulses to agency-dependent full  mobilization of local resources, different scientific traditions combined in  preparing this paradigm shift in regional development strategies and  policies.<SUP>81</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>82</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>83</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>84</SUP></P>     <P>‘Endogenous’ regional development strategies and policies see the possibility  of change of the local socio-economic context as dependent on the role of local  initiative and organizational capacity (<I>agency</I>). They emphasize the role  of territorial pro-active agency in mobilizing the ‘endogenous potential’ aimed  at ‘selective reliance’ for an ‘alternative’ <I>basic-needs</I> oriented  development.<SUP>85</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>86</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>87</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>88</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>89</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>90</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>91</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>92</SUP> These  contributions emphasize an explicit concern with <I>human needs</I>, with  <I>scale</I>, with <I>dealienation</I> and <I>participation</I>, with  <I>conflictuous social change</I> or with <I>poverty, unemployment and social  disequilibria.</I> Therefore, locally sustained ‘impulses’ for territorial  development may not be only ‘<I>mobilization oriented</I>’. They may also be  ‘<I>control oriented</I>’. Local initiative to stop the erosion of local  resources can be an example. Power relations will always be involved</P>     <P>In a complementary way, values, concepts and theoretical contributions  defending a ‘retreat to subsistence’ see the possibility of changing the local  socio-economic context as depending on the basis of mobilizing local communities  towards the individual and collective production of <I>use value</I> as well as  <I>exchange value</I> in meeting needs as defined by the local  communities.<SUP>93</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>94</SUP></P>     <P><I>Restructuring theory</I> and ‘locality studies’ emphasize the possibility  of change of the local socio-economic context as highly dependent on  <I>pro-active agency</I>. They emphasize the fact that <I>agency matters</I> in  shaping the concreteness of the implications of global restructuring. They  stress the potential of ‘locality studies’ to identify structures and mechanisms  leading to problems that are the focus for change and see localities as ‘real  contexts of social interaction’. This approach permits the analysis of both  local <I>and</I> non-local factors of local change and permits the analysis of  ‘conditions of possibility’ for intentional ‘locality effects’ to occur. As  <I>agency matters</I>, ‘intentional’ combinations of spatially variable  phenomena may lead to creating ‘locality effects’.<SUP>95</SUP></P>     <P>The contributions coming from <I>winning regions</I> approaches are very  varied and started being developed in the early 1980s from different traditions.  They all attempt to explain the successes of the economic performance of  ‘<I>winning’</I> regions as resulting from innovation and competitiveness in  small and medium sized firms. The central issue in their consensus lies in the  way the role of <I>context</I> is stressed in explaining ‘success’ of economic  performance of firms. They recognize the role of social cohesion for  ‘<I>territorial competitiveness’</I> and the role of social inclusion and social  empowerment in encouraging economic creativity by allowing diverse social groups  and individuals to realize their potential. Contributions from this field show  how policies to stimulate regional entrepreneurship should recognize the  centrality of policies to combat <I>poverty</I> and <I>social exclusion</I> in  this process.<SUP>96</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>97</SUP></P>     <P>Contributions stemming from ‘losing regions’ approaches, suggest the  possibility of change in the local socio-economic context as highly dependent on  pro-active agency aimed at counteracting ‘local disintegration’ and aiming at  ‘integrated area development’. Contributions from this tradition see that  theoretical developments on ‘old industrial regions’, ‘locality studies’,  ‘industrial districts’ and ‘winning regions’ cannot offer relevant contributions  to the analysis and the development strategies for ‘losing’ or ‘disintegrated  localities’.<SUP>98</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>99</SUP></P>     <P>Traditions coming from within the field of <I>community development</I> see  socio-economic change as depending on changes in attitudes and behaviour.  Building ‘critical’ awareness and collective action are seen as key factors for  possible change. Changes in attitudes and behaviour involve changes at  individual and collective levels namely regarding the possibility of collective  action. In the 60s working relevant contributions to ‘community development’  came from working with voluntary groups and organizations, addressing  individual's problems on a collective basis and seeking to understand and work  on the external reasons for their existence. Promoting participation, helping  people to acquire confidence, skills, knowledge and greater awareness of their  life, promoting empowerment and effective organization have been major community  development contributions to the local development agenda of today. As recalled  above, ‘<I>critical awareness’</I> and <I>collective action</I> play a central  role in the theoretical contributions coming from this field. Notions such as  ‘<I>participation</I>’, ‘<I>capacity building’</I> or ‘<I>empowerment’</I> in  local development clearly find their origins here.<SUP>100</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>101</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>102</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>103</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>104</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>105</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>106</SUP></P>     <P><I>Territorial ‘disintegration’ and ‘social determinants’ of health</I></P>     <P>The concept of <I>territorial disintegration</I> plays a central role in the  attempt to link contemporary conditions and context-dependent manifestations of  poverty related health inequities. It helps to discuss the ‘manoeuvring space’  and the substantive content of action of Municipalities acting for territorial  development in order to improve conditions in healthy communities.</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>As the point of departure is <I>not</I> static, the focus is centred on those  aspects of local change where acting to the ‘reversal’ of <I>territorial  disintegration</I> can help linking anti-poverty action to focus on poverty  related health inequities and tackling ‘social determinants’ of health. The role  of history and local specificity is recognized in accepting the  <I>path-dependent</I> character of any possibility of local change.</P>     <P><I>Territorial disintegration</I> can be linked to ‘social determinants’ in  many different ways (loss of hope, emigration of young higher qualified people,  no control over polluting activities of exogenously based firms, etc.). It can  be analyzed as occurring <I>in</I> a locality but not being restricted to local  causes. It can be easily reduced to the destiny of a territorial unit being  ‘<I>cut off</I>’ or ‘<I>divorced</I>’ from exogenous dynamics of capital  accumulation. As it is the case of ‘distressed urban areas’, <I>territorial  disintegration</I> may emerge from decline or dynamics produced locally <I>as  well as</I> elsewhere in the urban context whose spatial and social dynamics it  may depend on (spatial social segregation, spatial functional segregation, urban  land rent, economic ‘death’ of buildings, etc.). Even the possible fragmentation  of social relations in these areas cannot be dissociated from spatial and  temporal dimensions in contemporary globalizing conditions given the changing  role of space and time in ‘<I>extended social milieux</I>’.<SUP>107</SUP></P>     <P>Different kinds of health related problems can be recalled: location,  accessibility and restructuring of health care facilities; emigration and  community disintegration; ageing and social isolation; commuting, family life  and early detachment in child development; unemployment, suburban life and  social isolation; water pollution in small river basins and unhealthy conditions  for food production. In contemporary crisis conditions, unemployment and  precarious forms of employment require specific attention.<SUP>108</SUP></P>     <P>All these can be seen as examples of potential relations between exogenously  determined <I>territorial disintegration</I> and ‘social determinants’ of  health.</P>     <P><I>Local underdevelopment, territorial development and territorial  animation</I></P>     <P>An action-oriented theory of ‘<I>local underdevelopment’</I> is needed so as  to relate ‘<I>territorial disintegration’</I> with the ‘<I>non-emergence’</I> of  local initiative and pro-active <I>agency</I> in promoting local development and  health related ‘economic integration’ of poor households.<SUP>30</SUP></P>     <P>Such a theory of ‘local underdevelopment’ may provide an explanation of how  Municipalities can act in order to ‘counteract’ the role of structures and  mechanisms leading to the <I>erosion</I>, <I>underutilization</I> or  <I>over-utilization</I> of local resources contributing to health inequities  (emigration of the highest qualified members of local communities, health  damaging polluting activities of new productive plants, intensive wood cutting  in local forests by exogenous firms, etc.). It involves the complex  <I>interdependency</I> among ecological, economic, political, socio-cultural and  psychological factors related to the <I>inhibition</I> of local initiative and  the lack of local capacity in tackling ‘social determinants’ of health (lack of  awareness among local decision-makers, health related ‘skills gaps’ among local  planners, etc.).</P>     <P>Agency <I>cannot</I> be expected to emerge ‘spontaneously’ as a result of  ‘territorial disintegration’. Local initiative may not emerge  <I>spontaneously</I> and the meaning of action for local development may not be  clear.<SUP>109</SUP> Widely divergent points of view on the meaning of this  transformation combine to reinforce local social agents’ <I>inhibition</I> of  organizing forms of collective action, whether orientated towards preventing and  mitigating problems, or towards identifying and making the most of opportunities  arising out of the transformation process. This inhibition can involve  decision-makers in Municipalities. How to counteract this <I>inhibition</I>  could constitute the central focus of reflection in public policies aimed at  <I>reversing</I> ‘territorial disintegration’ processes.</P>     <P>That may be the role of <I>territorial animation</I>.<SUP>110</SUP>  Counteracting the ‘non-emergence’ of local initiative may play a critical role  in acting for territorial development in the framework of central as well as  local territorial development strategies and policies.</P>     <P>But, implementing <I>territorial animation</I> is challenging. It presupposes  acknowledgement that the action's <I>departure point</I> is actually the  <I>arrival point</I> of <I>territorial disintegration</I> processes. It means  recognizing that the ‘non-emergence’ of local initiatives could be a  <I>consequence</I> of those very processes. And it means admitting that current  public responses are <I>non-existent</I>, <I>insufficient</I> or  <I>inappropriate</I> for bringing about a ‘reversal’ of the processes that  inhibit those local initiatives from emerging.</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>On the other hand, if lasting changes in poverty situations may depend on  lasting changes in territorial context, this also involves the need of further  clarification concerning the relation between ‘health inequities’ and  ‘territorial disintegration’, and between the nature of ‘place-based’ approaches  and action-oriented territorial development.</P>     <P>This is particularly relevant when local initiative aiming at the ‘reversal’  of ‘territorial disintegration’ <I>cannot</I> be expected to occur  <I>spontaneously</I>. Territory-based capacity for initiative and organization  is vital for mobilizing the ‘endogenous potential’ of local communities to be  used in the collective effort to fully control and mobilize local resources.</P>     <P>Therefore, improving ‘healthy communities’ may strongly depend on Municipal  initiative in ‘reversing’ territorial disintegration processes. Building agency  and conditions for cross-sectoral policy integration, empowering civil society  and promoting animation for ‘economic integration’ (decreasing  market-dependency, enlarging the scope for income-earning activities, animating  the ‘whole’ real economy, etc.), Municipalities can aim at tackling poverty  related health inequities acting on ‘social determinants’ of health.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><B>A paradigm shift in planning for territorial development: linking  knowledge to action tackling social determinants of health</B></P>     <P>Poverty (as well as poverty-related health inequities), as a planning  problem, is a <I>wicked</I> problem. It cannot be approached as if it were a  <I>tame</I> one. Concrete anti-poverty action and concrete planning tasks cover  a wide variety of dimensions. The choice of methods and tools to be incorporated  is not independent from the conceptual and theoretical assumptions, or  institutional and organizational conditions, based on which action is conceived  and undertaken. <I>Wicked</I> problems in planning reinforce the <I>subjective  role</I> of planners in the planning process. The information needed to solve  the problems depends on one's idea for solving them. Having no stopping rule  defined in advance, it depends on planner's reasons where to stop. The  identification of potential solutions depends on the planner's role and the  choice of explanation for a <I>wicked</I> problem is arbitrary depending on the  planner's judgement.<SUP>111</SUP></P>     <P>First, this concerns the conceptual and theoretical assumptions related with  poverty and poverty related ‘health inequities’. Second, it concerns the nature  of planning at sub-national level which covers different national, scientific  and professional traditions in dealing with urban and regional planning (land  use planning, urban form, location and accessibilities, development promotion,  supporting collective self-empowerment, etc.).</P>     <P>However, current planning remains strongly dependent on ‘the production of  <I>the</I> plan’. This aspect has relevant implications. For example, access to  land may play a central role in anti-poverty action and land use control plays a  central role in intentional contextual change. But territorial planning theory  remains strongly influenced by ‘<I>spatial separatism</I>’ reflecting the  effects of the ‘crises of theory’ <I>in</I> planning.</P>     <P>A paradigm shift in planning for territorial development is moving the focus  away from the production of planning <I>documents</I> following planning  <I>phases</I> to explore different ways of <I>linking</I> knowledge to action in  making planning <I>functions</I> concrete (diagnosis, planning, organizing for  action, evaluation, etc.).</P>     <P>Yet, concrete anti-poverty action has different dimensions. Some dimensions  involve action in domains where problems can actually be represented as  <I>tame</I> ones. The relevant challenge remains in <I>not</I> confusing the  nature of <I>tame</I> and of <I>wicked</I> problems. It can be a useful  development on the basis of which the choice between methods and tools can be  best understood.</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>Planners are supposed to develop several roles and find the most adequate  approach to the different dimensions of the planning problems they are in charge  of dealing with. Different planning models offer different approaches. None  offers a totally satisfying perspective when dealing with the whole range of  issues related with poverty as a planning problem. Therefore, it may be relevant  to clarify the nature of activities that are favoured and the dimensions of  concrete anti-poverty action that can best be ‘solved’ by the framework of each  specific planning approach.</P>     <P>The ‘Rational-Comprehensive’ approach is particularly adequate to deal with  <I>tame</I> problems. Objective definitions can be given and logical solutions  can be searched. Defining the best location for a health centre, designing an  urban development for low-rent housing on public land, or finding the best  financial engineering model for building a new school in a <I>distressed urban  area</I> (given the constraints of the budget of a local government) are  examples of possible poverty related planning problems that can best be dealt  with using the help of this kind of approach.</P>     <P><I>Organizational outflanking</I> is a reality which poor people quite often  face. Fragmentation, isolation and diversity of the multidimensionality of the  experience of poverty raise crucial issues on the impossible formulation of a  general and common interest among the poor as well as the capacity for strategic  organization aimed at collective self-empowerment. In the short-term, when poor  people lack the capacity to organize for collective action and for informed  discussion about planning alternatives, the ‘Advocacy planning’ approach can be  a powerful source of inspiration. Translating into technical terms the  implications of representing the interests of poor people in a relodging process  aimed at slum eradication, defending a residential community of poor people from  the negative impact of the location of a polluting industrial plant or defining  criteria for the implementation of a Minimum Income Programme in a specific  locality are examples of problems where planning action can find inspiration in  this approach.</P>     <P>A structural understanding of poverty opens a broad scope of analysis for the  identification of the relations between poverty and structural societal  features. The analysis of the relations between the capitalist nature of  societies, the role of the national state and the emergence of poverty under  globalizing conditions may be a domain where contributions emerging from the  ‘Radical Political Economy’ approach can offer a relevant contribution. Acting  as <I>revealers of contradictions</I> or acting as <I>agents of social  innovation</I>, planners can get inspiration to deal with problems such as  identifying the drivers of capital accumulation in a locality and be prepared to  be informed about prospects for low-income and low-qualified jobs, evaluating  the potential job creation of foreign capital in a locality and assess the risk  of plant-closure by foreign capital owned firms. A further example can be found  in analysing the context of power relations in a locality and reflecting about  the potential contribution of unions and progressive parties to the support of  the creation of workers cooperatives. Those are examples of potential  contributions emerging from within this approach.</P>     <P>When poor people face <I>organizational outflanking</I>, it is not easy to  articulate their interests in the political arena, nor is it easy to interfere  in the <I>discursive field</I> and change the societal perception about poverty  problems. The contributions within the ‘Equity Planning’ approach aim at  representing poor people in the direction of making alliances with and working  for progressive politicians. As problem formulators, planners have the power to  shape debates. As <I>conceptual restructuring</I> may be crucial for changing  power relations aimed at assisting empowerment processes, planners may play a  relevant role when inspired by this model.</P>     <P>Problems such as attempting to change the <I>discourse</I> of non-poor people  about the existential problems of poor people and that the <I>non-poor</I>  define as ‘poverty’, creating mediatic events to direct public attention, or  directly addressing unions and political parties to capture their support for  anti-poverty struggles, are examples of problems that can be best dealt with in  the framework of the ‘Social Learning – Communicative Action’ approach. Poor  people have a rich knowledge about their own poverty and develop great expertise  about their <I>survival strategies</I> in difficult existential conditions.  Capturing this knowledge and being able to value it may be a major challenge in  planning for anti-poverty action.</P>     <P>The direct involvement of poor people in dealing with their own poverty  problems may be a challenge in anti-poverty action. <I>Collective  self-empowerment</I> may not emerge <I>spontaneously</I>, action may be required  in order to favour it. Planners within the ‘Radical Planning’ approach recognize  the value of the contextual and experiential knowledge that those belonging to  the mobilized community bring to the issues. They are open to learning through  action, through experience. Above all, to be effective radical practice depends  on interpersonal relations of trust and a social learning approach. The ‘Radical  Planning’ approach specifically addresses the problems raised by this  perspective. In working for social transformation in community-based  organizations, planners bring to radical practice general, specific and  substantive skills. Problems such as how to <I>listen</I> to poor people and how  to <I>interpret</I> the problems they experience, how to open the debate about  poverty problems as they are actually experienced (not just aiming at  <I>solving</I> them), how to communicate and manage group processes, how to  develop relevant knowledge about the formal employment system, and how to  realize the potential for job creation among poor people, are examples of  problems that can be best be dealt with on the basis of contributions emerging  from within this approach to planning.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><B>Towards an action-oriented theory of local underdevelopment: municipal  action possibilities in improving ‘healthy communities’</B></P>     <P>This paper suggests some contributions to discuss how Municipalities can  improve healthy communities tackling poverty related health inequities in  territorial planning for local development. The paper discussed paradigm shifts  in several domains and tried to discuss the implications of these shifts in  making action concrete in contemporary conditions.</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>Local initiative and local availability of resources are <I>not</I>  sufficient conditions for local development. ‘Passive’ reliance on ‘spatial  diffusion effects’ or ‘active’ attraction of exogenous capital and  entrepreneurial initiative are <I>not</I> a guarantee of local development.</P>     <P>As was discussed above, local development can be promoted, or blocked, by  central as well as by local authorities. It was understood as a <I>method</I> to  promote a <I>basic needs</I> oriented regional development, i.e. a territorial  approach to ‘another’ development, and as such it involves the  <I>centralization</I> as well as <I>decentralization</I> of the role of the  state.</P>     <P>Widening perspectives for action, Municipalities can be reoriented from the  reduction of their scope of action to the relations between state and the  market. Municipalities can develop new possibilities of relationships with civil  society and with the social and solidarity economy. This also involves other  priorities, other attitudes and other planning methodologies. This involves  <I>listening, responding</I>, <I>capacity building</I>, <I>catalyzing</I>,  <I>leading, governing</I> and <I>learning in dialogue</I> with their  communities.<SUP>112</SUP></P>     <P>Municipal anti-poverty action was already discussed elsewhere.<SUP>30</SUP>  This perspective will be further illustrated below on the basis of seven domains  of action. These domains can illustrate the possibility of widening the  understanding of potential action on ‘social determinants’ of health, tackling  ‘health inequities and promoting health related ‘economic integration’ of poor  households: reinforcing conditions for effective ‘<I>agency</I>’ and ‘<I>local  governance</I>’ (health oriented cross-sectoral action, local initiative and  organizational capacity focusing on local ‘health inequities’, etc.), building a  strategic ‘<I>vision</I>’ for change (building hope and trust, creating images  and projects of possible futures of healthier life, etc.), <I>organizing</I>  poor households for the creation of ‘localities’ (animating democracy and  participation, building associations and cooperatives, widening organizational  solutions for self-help in the communities, etc.), decreasing  <I>market-dependency</I> in meeting intermediate needs (food security and  self-provisioning, conditions for healthy food, introducing local currencies for  consumption diversification, creating conditions for accessing seeds for  bio-diversity and healthy food, etc.), stimulating <I>non-conventional</I>  possibilities for <I>income-earning</I> alternatives (animating ‘inclusive  entrepreneurship’ solutions for income on the basis of team starters,  centralizing marketing and commercialization, etc.), promoting <I>pathways to  integration</I> taking advantage of job creation and competitiveness of local  firms (job matching, involving employers in designing training possibilities,  etc.), promoting ‘inclusive entrepreneurship’ and stimulating the  <I>thickness</I> of the local <I>whole</I> real economy (reinforcing intra-local  interdependencies and synergy, building local economic circuits, mobilizing the  full potential of sub-contracting by local firms, etc.).</P>     <P><I>Action aiming at reinforced ‘agency’ and local governance for ‘selective  self-reliance’</I></P>     <P>Concrete ways of specific local action to face ‘local underdevelopment’  require local capacity to <I>control</I> the use of local resources and the  local capacity to support entrepreneurship and to <I>animate</I> the emergence  of initiatives from the social and solidarity economy. That is the reason why  the Municipal role may rely strongly on animation issues (institutional  animation for cross-sectoral action and organizational capacity, animation for  citizenship, animation for the ‘economic integration’ of poor households, etc.).  Basic changes in institutional response, collective mobilization and attitudes  and behaviour of individuals and groups are aimed at. This is a complex task and  much has to be done to prepare adequate intervention methodologies. Each  situation is particular and each solution is specific.</P>     <P>Municipalities ‘causal powers’ can be activated in different ways. This  concerns an adequate understanding of ‘power’.<SUP>38</SUP> The ‘discursive  field’ of power (understanding poverty as <I>distinct</I> from deprivation,  recognizing the <I>structural</I> causes of poverty, assuming the  <I>responsibility</I> of society on its emergence and eradication, understanding  of claims of poor people as <I>rights</I>, defending anti-poverty action as an  <I>imperative</I> of social justice, etc.) and the ‘organizational field’ of  power (animating the creation of organizations aimed at the collective  empowerment of poor people, counter-acting their ‘<I>organizational  outflanking</I>, political commitment at central <I>and</I> local level to  facilitate the access of poor people to resources, etc.) <I>both</I> offer  opportunities to the activation of Municipal ‘causal powers’. The relation  between the ‘world view’ and the priority of anti-poverty action may be directly  addressed.<SUP>29</SUP></P>     <P>In fact, formal political and planning legal competences may be a point of  departure but they do <I>not</I> exhaust the key issues concerning the relevance  of power.<SUP>38</SUP> Also the actual control over relevant local resources  depends basically on the understanding of the ‘web’ of power relations in the  context of which the “<I>manoeuvring space</I>” is to be ‘conquered’. Building  alliances, animating the creation of partnerships and networking on a  trans-local national and international basis or taking advantage of  opportunities offered by international organizations are examples of initiatives  that may help the achievement of objectives (‘strategic’ tradition of  power).</P>     <P>Municipalities can act towards <I>building</I> agency and reinforced local  governance for the control of local resources (avoiding the closure of public  health care services, land use control, preserving food production in towns,  enlarging possibilities for healthy organic food production, etc.). This can  even signify that in the context of health related anti-poverty action,  Municipal initiative may have to be directed <I>against</I> initiatives from  <I>both</I> the central government or from business (mobilization against health  damaging polluting productive plants, unhealthy food diets in schools, health  damaging working conditions, etc.).</P>     <P>That is a central aspect in building local governance. OECD showed how the  critical factors underlying the possibility of local cross-sectoral policy  integration rely on sectoral flexibility and central decision making combined  with local governments’ leadership in animating local governance and  cross-sectoral policy integration.<SUP>113</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>114</SUP></P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>Legal competences of Municipalities may have to be used for the  <I>defence</I> of poor people's rights or of the ‘territorial interest’ and to  preserve the possibility of subordinating the use of local resources to locally  defined strategic priorities (to stop initiatives from firms aimed at avoidable  collective dismissals, to support initiatives from the social and solidarity  economy, protecting natural resources and fostering collective use value food  production, etc.).</P>     <P><I>Action to build ‘hope’ and strategic ‘visions’ of possible and desirable  futures</I></P>     <P>At local community level, Municipalities must identify the global structural  constraints to local action and establish a frame for local alternative  strategies. In healthy communities, the point of departure is <I>not</I> static  in anti-poverty action.</P>     <P>The context-dependency of poverty and poverty related health inequities  requires an understanding of the causes of its emergence and persistence. The  theoretical contributions discussed elsewhere in relation to ‘losing’ regions  and the concept of ‘local disintegration’ are useful here to understand the  particular aspects of poverty in ‘distressed urban areas’ as a specific form of  ‘local disintegrated’ areas. The theoretical contributions stemming from  ‘locality studies’ help understand the locality as a social context of ‘real  interaction’ allowing the <I>non-local causes</I> of poverty as well as  <I>non-local conditions</I> to be identified on the basis of which local  development may be sustained.</P>     <P>In fact, local development implicitly assumes the possibility of the  <I>previous</I> existence of a ‘project of hope’ associated with a ‘search for  meaning’ in life.<SUP>115</SUP> This would also mean that the existence of a  project might depend on the previous ‘creation’ of the  locality.<SUP>30</SUP></P>     <P>Local development impulses suggest the capacity to create ‘<I>images’</I>  about desirable futures. In ‘distressed urban areas’ of ‘disintegrated  localities’ desirable futures presuppose hope and the possibility of  ‘<I>hope’</I> emerges from ‘<I>trust’</I> in the context of personal  <I>interaction</I>. This means that the specificity of ‘endogenous’ mobilization  in regional and local development issues cannot be reduced to the question of  the ‘availability’ of resources. Resources themselves are <I>not</I> independent  of the purposes of human agency. It refers mainly to the possibility that  ‘endogenous potentials’ may be mobilized to meet locally defined unmet needs of  poor households according to locally defined <I>priorities</I>. That is why the  concept of local development cannot be strictly reduced to ‘locally induced  economic growth’ and is linked to a concept of ‘<I>another’</I> development  involving different priorities in using local resources. If local initiative to  face ‘local disintegration’ is needed, community mobilization around a local  development ‘vision’ will be necessary and a ‘vision’ linked to a ‘desirable  future’ requires ‘hope’. However, hope is difficult to find among poor people in  ‘disintegrated localities’.</P>     <P>This raises two different kinds of problems. First, it raises an  epistemological problem on the identification of the conditions which may be the  basis of a <I>non-observable</I> reality (a desirable future) and of  anti-poverty action. Second, it raises the difficulty of building <I>hope</I>  and <I>trust</I> among poor people caught in a ‘disintegrated locality’. Even if  their <I>place-bound</I> identity offers some form of collective identity it is  associated to places where it is difficult to imagine spontaneous ways out of  vicious circles, cumulative causation and negative identities.</P>     <P>That is why ‘fiction’ is increasingly relevant in development promotion.  Video and film are being used increasingly as tools to offer positive  identities, ‘images’ of possible ‘realities’ and the ‘illustration’ of ways out  of despair.<a href="#2"><SUP>2</SUP></a><a name="top2"></a></P>     <P>Nevertheless, ‘images’ of desirable futures must involve <I>both</I> the poor  and the non-poor. This aspect touches a central domain of the ‘discursive field’  introduced above and how it can become a central domain of Municipal action.  Understanding poverty issues not as a social <I>division</I> of groups but as  <I>processes</I> that may touch all the community may be very relevant. The poor  of today may become non-poor as a result of anti-poverty action. And the  non-poor of today may become poor tomorrow if no anti-poverty action happens  today.</P>     <P><I>Action to create ‘localities’ organizing poor people for  empowerment</I></P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>Municipalities may play an important role in animating the whole community  for development. Helping poor people to self-help is a privileged domain. Giving  ‘voice’ and reinforcing existing associative forms (immigrants associations,  sports associations, etc.) may be an initial form of counteracting  ‘organizational outflanking’.<SUP>38</SUP> Given the ‘collective isolation’ of  poor people small steps are needed. Rebuilding social relations and bridging the  ‘social void’ may become easier by building small-scale organizational forms in  the form of ‘communities of interests’.<SUP>116</SUP> Initial action can start  by building solutions to ‘felt’ problems and be gradually linked to strategic  objectives of a local development project. Following the ‘inspiration’ offered  by ‘community development’ and by the ‘socio-anthropological  model’<SUP>6</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>117</SUP> <I>community centred  approaches</I> can be a useful methodological position in development  promotion.</P>     <P>The rebuilding of social relations, as central issue in promoting mental  health, becomes possible. According to this way of acting, local development may  help bring together individuals sharing problems, wishes or projects and help  them build ‘interest communities’. These communities can undertake the  <I>defence</I> of their interest and act as catalysts for the mobilization of  the whole community in local development processes. This approach shows how  ‘localities’ can be <I>created</I> given the fact that social relations are  their material basis (not physical space).</P>     <P><I>Action to decrease ‘market-dependency’ in meeting intermediate  needs</I></P>     <P>The animation of the social and solidarity economy may be a privileged  ‘socio-economic space’ to promote less ‘market-dependency’. If spontaneous forms  of organization do not appear, the promotion of small-scale organization to  solve real problems of everyday life may be a starting point of Municipal action  (promoting access to land and productive tools, animating the creation of  associative forms for self-help for individual and collective forms of  self-provisioning, etc.).</P>     <P>Public services and individual and collective use-value production may  combine to create new forms of self-organization (micro-insurance organizations,  patient associations, associative nurseries, etc.) where small-scale solidarity  may find a material expression. Self-provision and self-sufficiency in food  production<SUP>118</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>119</SUP> or local  currencies<SUP>120</SUP> are examples of diverse domains of contemporary  experience leading to decreasing market-dependency.</P>     <P>This kind of solutions may well be promoted by Municipal initiative  (associative alternatives to institutionalized elderly care, the access to land  and technical support to self-provisioning of housing, self-provisioning in food  production, etc.). The support to the initiatives from the social and solidarity  economy facilitating access to land, creating legal frameworks for community  based organizations, encouraging ‘self-reliance’ and ‘self-provisioning’ in the  poorest areas (communal gardening, water infrastructures, rain water harvesting,  renewable energy, etc.) are examples of action possibilities.</P>     <P>In Andernach (Germany), the Municipality organized formal collective use  value food production following agricultural organic and permaculture  principles.<a href="#3"><sup>3</sup></a><a name="top3"></a> In Krems (Austria), the Association Arche-Noah (10 000  members) is <I>preserving</I> and cultivating for more than 20 years endangered  vegetable, fruit and grain diversity.<a href="#4"><sup>4</sup></a><a name="top4"></a></P>     <P>In contemporary conditions, in spite of the crisis and austerity policies,  institutional conditions still do not counteract in a systematic way subjective  interpretations of <I>need</I> as lack of <I>consumption</I>. Actually, the  <I>condition</I>s for the <I>avoidance</I> of serious harm become increasingly  <I>market-dependent</I> in meeting <I>intermediate needs</I> (due to cut-backs  in state provision of health care and housing, food prices, etc.). The relevance  of decreasing ‘market-dependency’ and the opportunities of the social and  solidarity economy in this field are <I>not</I> independent from ‘critical’  awareness that might be <I>intentionally</I> raised among the poor  themselves.</P>     <P><I>Action to widen possibilities for ‘income-earning’ activities</I></P>     <P>Municipalities can also act in order to widen possibilities for  ‘income-earning’ activities. Stimulating ‘non-traditional’ small scale  entrepreneurial initiative among the poor, supporting commercialization and  stimulating distributional channels or decentralizing local administrative  services are examples of action possibilities.</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>In anti-poverty action, widening <I>income-earning</I> opportunities by ways  other than working for a wage are central aspects requiring social innovation  for the reinforcement of action. As introduced above, organizational innovation  may include conventional micro-firms, cooperatives or popular productive  organizations’. These kinds of organizations may offer a possible job  alternative to all those who have no other. They may contribute to the  valorization of <I>informal skills</I> and vocational abilities, to the  diffusion of <I>democratic procedures</I>, to the generation of <I>social  learning</I> and <I>economic literacy</I> and to the reinforcement of the basis  for <I>local empowerment</I>.</P>     <P>However, the <I>emergence</I> of this kind of initiative is highly dependent  on pro-active <I>agency</I>. Specific organizational forms have to be created to  ensure the adequate ‘animation’ activities, the counselling on appropriate  technologies and management strategies and the necessary organization of  marketing, distribution and commercialization. ‘Decentralization’ in production  requires ‘centralization’ in commercialization.<SUP>74</SUP><SUP>,  </SUP><SUP>75</SUP></P>     <P>Municipalities can facilitate the creation of ‘local development agencies’  for this specific purpose. ‘Animation’, information, and funding may become  easier. The possibility of face-to-face human relations makes this kind of  support possible and efficient. Local development agencies can also play an  important role in developing new attitudes towards entrepreneurship.</P>     <P><I>Action to take advantage of new formal job creation promoting ‘pathways to  integration’</I></P>     <P>In anti-poverty action the widening of opportunities for  <I>income-earning</I> activities including <I>access to a job</I> working for a  <I>wage</I> is obviously very relevant. But as has been shown in contemporary  conditions, access to a job depends increasingly on new job creation and new job  creation depends increasingly on new small-scale entrepreneurship.<SUP>121</SUP>  In spite of spatial variations, relevant job creation in existing firms can only  occur in a relatively small number of firms. Helping poor people access existing  jobs is in itself a challenge requiring personalized efforts. Approaches based  on ‘pathways to integration’ offer possibilities for action in this domain. It  requires the precise identification of job opportunities and developing efforts  to ensure these opportunities ‘match’ appropriately the characteristics offered  by the poor in this locality.</P>     <P>In spite of crisis conditions job creating firms develop offensive strategies  emphasizing product <I>differentiation</I> rather than costs.<SUP>122</SUP> They  differentiate principally on the basis of the <I>quality</I> of the product they  offer and the superior <I>service</I> they provide to their customers. Evidence  showed how in the past more than 60% of growth occurred by entering <I>new  markets</I> and through <I>new products</I>. People are considered to be the key  in these firms, and enterprises are concerned with maintaining  <I>highly-motivated</I> and <I>well qualified</I> staff. Most of the finance for  growth was ‘<I>self</I>-<I>generated</I>’.</P>     <P>Municipalities have a relevant role to play building the ‘business case’ for  the interdependency between competitiveness and social cohesion, for the  relevance of their interdependency for territorial cohesion and as an  opportunity to implement at local level the ILO agenda for quality jobs, ‘decent  work’ and secure working conditions.</P>     <P><I>Action reinforces the ‘thickness’ of the local ‘whole’ economy</I></P>     <P>The ‘whole economy model’ introduced above, helped to show the increasing  relevance of approaches based on the ‘<I>household economy’</I> as a conceptual  basis to understand the growing contemporary relations between the social and  solidarity economy and the formal economy. The household strategies of ‘division  of labour’ establish these kinds of relations.</P>     <P>In contemporary conditions the relations between the formal and the informal  sectors become more porous and increased attention has to be paid to the  particular ways <I>both</I> sectors relate with exchange and use value  production <I>within</I> the household and <I>through</I> ‘household survival  strategies’. Also, the role of local small and medium size firms in job creation  and the economic relations they develop among them and with big and  trans-national corporations become more relevant when analysing the conditions  for local socio-economic change aimed at the lasting ‘economic integration’ of  poor households. In fact, these <I>interdependencies</I> may combine to  potentially enlarge opportunities for income-earning activities of poor people  (self-employment, micro-firms, organizations of the ‘social economy’, ‘pathways  to integration’ in linking the poor to new job creation and to the labour  market, etc.).</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>It was also seen that the socio-economic context can be <I>made</I> and that  changes in the socio-economic context can be identified and understood as  necessary in order to achieve a desired outcome. Thus, the health related  ‘economic integration’ of poor households can be related to institutions and  pro-active agency involved in ‘<I>making’</I> a socio-economic context to a  lasting favourable possibility of change in healthy communities.</P>     <P>Municipalities may play a central role in <I>making</I> the socio-economic  context, creating the institutional and organizational conditions for  ‘<I>thickness’</I> (intra-local interdependencies and interaction for synergy,  linking the diverse dimensions of the local ‘whole’ economy, etc.).  Municipalities may also play an important role in identifying <I>invisible</I>  underutilized resources. Community affective and emotional bonds may be  determinant factors of success in development processes. Informal skills (as  revealed in hobbies, etc.) may sometimes play a significant role in innovation  and small-scale organization. The knowledge of retired people may be  strategically relevant information for collective self-empowerment, for  small-scale production or social reproduction-oriented initiatives. This can  contribute to raising self-esteem and a sense of usefulness among the elderly  being a relevant field for the promotion of mental health and health related  activities. Local artists can help to search for innovative solutions in  production and process (creative packaging for local products, etc.).</P>     <P>There is also the case of many other possibilities: full mobilization of  local available resources, mobilization of renewable energy resources, recycling  solid waste, preserving local natural ecosystems, promoting bio-diversity by  protecting threatened species, adapting local productive restructuring to  ‘exogenous’ constraints, mobilization of local savings, support to productive  initiatives from traditional entrepreneurs and non-traditional entrepreneurs  from the social and solidarity economy, etc.</P>     <P>Municipalities can also contribute to the <I>thickness</I> of the local  ‘whole’ economy reinforcing local and intraregional communication (local radio  stations, local newspapers, etc.), stimulating the involvement of schools and  pedagogical innovation or creating ‘local observatories’. Here lies a huge  potential for health education and for the dissemination of relevant health  information.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><B>Improving ‘healthy communities’: conditions for ‘social innovation’ and  possible action</B></P>     <P>The examples introduced above show that it is possible to widen possibilities  of acting in tackling ‘social determinants’ of health and integrating the  challenges of different paradigm shifts in action. Adequate action requires  ‘social innovation’ and specific conditions. Political will, conceptual  sharpening and theoretical development concerning the relation between health  and development play central roles. Political will also plays a central role in  improving cross-sectoral local ‘collaborative governance’ for policy integration  and community involvement. Finally, widening possibilities of acting also  requires organizational capacity and technical skills.</P>     <P>Coming back to the research problem formulated above, it is possible to open  perspectives for a potential role to be played by Municipalities in order to  improve healthy communities focusing on poverty related ‘health inequities’ and  it is possible to make this contribution concrete in territorial planning for  local development.</P>     <P>The different paradigm shifts discussed showed how relevant it is to be aware  of their implications and how different possibilities can become concrete.</P>     <P>Tackling ‘social determinants’ of health is challenging. Linking anti-poverty  action to territorial development in health promotion does not correspond to  current practice yet. It involves a kind of organizational capacity strongly  dependent on meeting ‘skills gaps’ in concrete acting. But it is possible to  meet these ‘skills gaps’ learning from practice. It may be the case of  organizing useful learning conditions on the basis of the results of the WHO  Healthy Cities Movement. Contemporary crisis conditions may require this kind of  urgent effort.</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<P>In Europe, the relation between the increasing complexity of problems, the  shortcomings of current policy responses and the potential usefulness of results  of experimental action does not represent a new concern. The roots of this  understanding can be already found in the late 1970s with the beginning of  experimental anti-poverty programmes aiming at innovation in public policies.  Several programmes were developed (Poverty I 1975–1980, Poverty II 1984–1989 and  Poverty III 1989–1994) and a new generation of Community Initiatives was  launched since the early 90s (Urban, Leader, Employment &amp; Adapt, Equal,  etc.). It was supposed that the results of experimental programmes would  contribute to the opening of new avenues of action and to <I>capacity  building</I> among decision-makers, practitioners and citizens.</P>     <P>However, the simple dissemination of information about the results of those  programmes (‘best practices’) did not meet this objective in an automatic way.  An explicit concern with learning conditions in meeting ‘skills gaps’ is still  hard to find in a systematic way. The kind of ‘skills gaps’ involved in action  concern both ‘technical’ and ‘generic’ skills and are not developed by the  formal school and training systems in Europe as was already recognized by the  Bristol Accord.<SUP>123</SUP></P>     <P>The concrete ways of organizing learning ‘from practice’, producing  context-relevant knowledge and developing skills requires adequate methodologies  in the framework of clear learning paradigms.<a href="#5"><sup>5</sup></a><a name="top5"></a> In order to ‘make  sense’ of available information central paradigm shifts in different  professional fields have to be acknowledged so as to promote ‘social innovation’  and to cope with contemporary problems.<SUP>124</SUP><SUP>, </SUP><SUP>125</SUP>  This paper may be considered a contribution to this discussion.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><B>Bibliograf&iacute;a</B></P>     <!-- ref --><P>1. WHO. About Health 2020 [online]. Copenhagen: Regional Office for Europe;  2013. 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<body><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>     <P><B>Notes</B></P>     <P><a href="#top1">1</a><a name="1"></a> The European Commission''s “Green Paper on Territorial Cohesion: turning  territorial diversity into strength” (CEC, 2008) was drafted following the  adoption of the “Territorial Agenda of the European Union” at the informal  meeting of Member State ministers responsible for spatial planning and  development, held in May 2007 under the German Presidency of the European Union.  An independent report written by Fabricio Barca, “An Agenda for a Reformed  Cohesion Policy: a place-based approach to meeting European Union challenges and  expectations” (2009), takes an in-depth look at this perspective.</P>     <P><a href="#top2">2</a><a name="2"></a> This is the essential basis of the methodology being followed by Le&atilde;o  Lopes, former Minister of Culture of Cabo Verde. Le&atilde;o Lopes is film maker and  creator of “Atelier Mar” an NGO involved in development action in the islands of  Santo Ant&atilde;o and S&atilde;o Vicente.</P>     <P><a href="#top3">3</a><a name="3"></a> The ‘eatable town Andernach’ offers its citizens free produced vegetables  and fruits in the public space. A group of unemployed volunteered to ensure the  social usefull production of food. The citizens are invite to take advantage of  offered plants: “<I>Feel free to pick</I>”<I>.</I> For more information, see  Stadt Andernach here <A  href="http://www.andernach.de/de/leben_in_andernach/essbare_stadt.html" target="_blank">http://www.andernach.de/de/leben_in_andernach/essbare_stadt.html</A>.</P>     <P><a href="#top4">4</a><a name="4"></a> The Association works on bringing traditional and rare varieties into  gardens and on the market again. The Association collects local seeds and  preserves bio-diversity for the increased local control of organic healthy food  production. The seeds are used by market oriented local farmers as well as  citizens involved in individual and collective self-provisioning in food  production. For more information see Arche-Noah here <A  href="http://www.arche-noah.at/etomite/index.php?id=271" target="_blank">http://www.arche-noah.at/etomite/index.php?id=271</A>.</P>     <P><a href="#top5">5</a><a name="5"></a> The Portuguese Equal Anim@Te Project was centred on this kind of challenge.  It developed from the National Thematic Network on ‘Territorial Animation’ and  experimental action was developed in the final phase of Equal Community  Initiative (2009). Experimental action was developed on the basis of the  methodological contributions of the ‘Communities of Practice’ approach.</P>       ]]></body><back>
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