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“Stop talking around projects and talk about solutions”: Positioning health within infrastructure policy to achieve the sustainable development goals
Institution:1. Menzies Centre for Health Policy, Sydney School of Public Health, Level 2 The Hub, Charles Perkins Centre D17, The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia;2. Level 2 The Hub, Charles Perkins Centre D17, The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia;3. Sydney Health Ethics, Sydney School of Public Health, Level 1, Medical Foundation Building K25, The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia;4. School of Regulation and Global Governance (RegNet) College of Asia and The Pacific Director, Menzies Centre for Health Policy, H.C. Coombs Extension Building #8 Fellows Road, The Australian National University Canberra, ACT, 0200, Australia;5. Centre for Health Research, Western Sydney University, School of Medicine, Australia
Abstract:Purpose and settingInfrastructure is a global multi-trillion dollar market presenting many opportunities and risks for sustainable development. This article aims to foster better conceptualisation of the connections and tensions between infrastructure policy and public health in the light of the Sustainable Development Goals, especially ‘good health and wellbeing’ (number 3) and ‘industry, innovation and infrastructure’ (number 9), based on findings from interviews with a purposive sample of senior practicing Australian infrastructure policy makers.Principal findingsWe use an institutional framework to explore the ideas, actors, rules and mandates, and procedures underpinning the inclusion of health in infrastructure policy. Informants defined infrastructure as the construction and provision of services that facilitate economic, environmental and social outcomes. The tendency to default to infrastructure as essential for economic success has fundamental challenges for the SDGs, particularly the politically driven pursuit of ‘mega-project’ legacies, sector-specific siloed governance arrangements, and inadequate conceptualisations of costs and benefits.ConclusionsPublic health and infrastructure policy are mutually re-enforcing given they both concern the public interest with implications for all 17 SDGs. Positioning health and wellbeing as fundamental societal outcomes from infrastructure decisions would go a long way to helping achieve the SDGs.
Keywords:Sustainable development goals  Public health  Infrastructure  Policy  Institutions
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