Water and the urban metabolism: essays on the remaking of urban water regimes since the eighteenth century-introduction
Date
2025
Authors
Frost, L.
Shanahan, M.P.
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Journal article
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Journal of Urban History, 2025; 51(3):485-488
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Abstract
This introductory article explores the concept of urban metabolism, through which cities’ need for water transforms inputs into biomass and waste products, and its influence on urban water regimes. It provides a summary of existing literature, and explains how a cross-disciplinary approach, drawing on a range of urban experiences, can add value to current policy debates about the costs of urban water management, and environmental problems in general. The case studies presented here examine urban water regimes in Britain, Europe, Asia, and the United States since the eighteenth century. Using methods from a range of historical disciplinary approaches, this special issue identifies the diverse forces that generate a variety of outcomes, with non-linear improvements in urban water infrastructure shaped by contemporary technology and medical knowledge, social inequality, local politics, and path-dependent impact of previous planning and construction decisions.
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Copyright 2024 The Author(s).