Housing, the Built Environment, and the Good Life

Item

Title
Housing, the Built Environment, and the Good Life
Description
At any age, the pursuit of a good life is easier in a physical environment that promotes health, supports activities important to self‐fulfillment, and facilitates connections to the larger community. In old age, the home and neighborhood environments are particularly important: they are the locations where older people spend most their time, and they can have a great impact on independence, social connection, feelings of self‐worth, and physical and emotional well‐being.

Within the urban planning field, home and neighborhood characteristics are important dimensions of debates about the measurement of human progress and quality of life, particularly as an alternative to purely economic measures. They are also key issues in public health, particularly as they relate to physical, social, and mental well‐being. Here, we focus on how to improve the fit of environments for people as they age.
Version of Record
Creator
Molinsky, Jennifer
Forsyth, Ann
Subject
Philosophy
Health Policy
Health(social science)
Issues
Publisher
Date
2019-01-18T14:04:22Z
2018-09
2019-01-18T14:04:22Z
Type
Journal Article
Format
application/pdf
Identifier
Molinsky, Jennifer, and Ann Forsyth. "Housing, the Built Environment, and the Good Life." The Hastings Center Report 48, no. S3 (2018): S50-56.
0093-0334
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:38034712
10.1002/hast.914
Source
Hastings Center Report
Language
en_US
Relation
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/hast.914
The Hastings Center Report