Data and density: Two advantages cities have in boosting health equity
Health equity is key because social factors account for 80-90% of health outcomes. Here's how cities can use data and density to bolster health equity.
Diana Rodríguez Franco has a PhD in sociology from Northwestern University, with a master's degree in sociology from the same university, and a law (J.D) and economics degree (B.A) from University of Los Andes (Bogotá).
She has dedicated her life to the study and defense of human rights. As Deputy Director and researcher at the Center for the Study of Law, Justice and Society - Dejusticia (Centro de Estudios de Derecho, Justicia y Sociedad), she focused on citizen participation, forced displacement, access to health, and environmental policy and advocacy.
She has also been a professor at the Business and Law Schools at University of Los Andes.
Her publications include:
• Radical Deprivation on Trial: The Impact of Judicial Activism on Socioeconomic Rights in the Global South (Cambridge Univ Press, 2015)
• “Internal Wars, Taxation, and State-Building” (American Sociological Review, 2016)
• “La paz ambiental: retos y propuestas para el posacuerdo" (Dejusticia, 2017).
• Juicio a la Exclusión: El impacto de los tribunales sobre los derechos sociales en el Sur Global (Siglo XXI Editores, 2015)