Routledge Handbook of Urban Water Governance
Herausgeber: Pinto, Francisco Silva; Bolognesi, Thomas; Farrelly, Megan
Routledge Handbook of Urban Water Governance
Herausgeber: Pinto, Francisco Silva; Bolognesi, Thomas; Farrelly, Megan
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This handbook provides a comprehensive, state of the art overview of urban water governance. It addresses the key questions of how urban water governance works, how is it shaped and what the impacts are.
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This handbook provides a comprehensive, state of the art overview of urban water governance. It addresses the key questions of how urban water governance works, how is it shaped and what the impacts are.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 394
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. März 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 174mm
- Gewicht: 453g
- ISBN-13: 9780367523541
- ISBN-10: 036752354X
- Artikelnr.: 73120504
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 394
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. März 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 174mm
- Gewicht: 453g
- ISBN-13: 9780367523541
- ISBN-10: 036752354X
- Artikelnr.: 73120504
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Thomas Bolognesi is a researcher at the Geneva School of Business Administration, HES-SO. His research investigates the processes of social-ecological systems evolution, emphasizing non-linearities and patterns diversity. He combines economics and public policy analysis to study the organization and effects of urban water services regulation, the development of water policy regimes, and water security. Francisco Silva Pinto is an Assistant Professor at Lusofona University (LU) and researcher at EIGeS, FE-LU, and CERIS, IST-UL. His research interests cover the application of numerical modelling and analytics to support decision making in governance, pricing, and finance of utilities (mainly water supply, wastewater, and waste) under critical socio-economic and environmental situations. Megan Farrelly is an Associate Professor in the School of Social Sciences at Monash University. Her research explores the intersection of urban water governance and sustainability transitions, focusing on processes and pathways for delivering practical and socio-institutional change towards sustainable urban transformations.
List of Contributors. Introduction- Urban Water Governance: Approaching a
pressing environmental and social challenge. Part I: Technical and
historical aspects of Water supply systems. 1)Urban water cycle and
services: an integrative perspective. 2)Traditional systems of drinking
water delivery: technical aspects and sources. 3)Hybrid water supply
systems: resilience and implementability. 4)Urban water supply and life
cycle assessment. 5)Modelling Urban Water Infrastructure Renewal.
6)Territories and technologies: history and current trends of their
interaction in urban water services. Part II: Technical and historical
aspects of Wastewater systems. 7)Conventional systems for urban sanitation
and wastewater management in Middle and High income countries. 8)Sanitation
systems: Are hybrid systems sustainable or does winner takes all?
9)Management of Urban Drainage Infrastructure. 10)The history of
technological change in urban wastewater management, 1830-2010. Part III:
Regulation and Economic perspectives. 11)Institutional perspectives on
water services. 12)Fragmentation in Urban Water Governance: Navigating
Legal and Normative Modalities. 13)Revisiting the theory on the regulation
of water utilities: Evolution, challenges and trends. 14)Trends and
comparisons of outcomes between public and privately owned utilities.
15)Institutional, economic, and spatial barriers to water services delivery
in urban slums and informal settlements. Part IV: Political processes.
16)Actor networks in urban water governance. 17)Policy transfer in urban
water management: evidence from ten BEGIN cities. 18)Rethinking urban water
governance and infrastructure in Europe: Challenges and opportunities of
regionalization and organizational autonomy. 19)Sustainability Transitions
in Urban Water Management: Assessing the Robustness of Institutional
Arrangements. Part V: Urban Water Governance and Sustainability. 20)Urban
metabolism and water sensitive cities governance - Designing and evaluating
water-secure, resilient, sustainable, liveable cities. 21)Leveraging
Artificial Intelligence in Addressing Water Safety Challenges. 22)Political
ecologies of urban water governance. 23)Territorial Integration and
Innovation for Good Urban Water Governance. 24)Urban Water Security.
25)Urban Water Quality and Chemical Pollution. New Emerging contaminants:
Nanomaterials and Microplastics. Index.
pressing environmental and social challenge. Part I: Technical and
historical aspects of Water supply systems. 1)Urban water cycle and
services: an integrative perspective. 2)Traditional systems of drinking
water delivery: technical aspects and sources. 3)Hybrid water supply
systems: resilience and implementability. 4)Urban water supply and life
cycle assessment. 5)Modelling Urban Water Infrastructure Renewal.
6)Territories and technologies: history and current trends of their
interaction in urban water services. Part II: Technical and historical
aspects of Wastewater systems. 7)Conventional systems for urban sanitation
and wastewater management in Middle and High income countries. 8)Sanitation
systems: Are hybrid systems sustainable or does winner takes all?
9)Management of Urban Drainage Infrastructure. 10)The history of
technological change in urban wastewater management, 1830-2010. Part III:
Regulation and Economic perspectives. 11)Institutional perspectives on
water services. 12)Fragmentation in Urban Water Governance: Navigating
Legal and Normative Modalities. 13)Revisiting the theory on the regulation
of water utilities: Evolution, challenges and trends. 14)Trends and
comparisons of outcomes between public and privately owned utilities.
15)Institutional, economic, and spatial barriers to water services delivery
in urban slums and informal settlements. Part IV: Political processes.
16)Actor networks in urban water governance. 17)Policy transfer in urban
water management: evidence from ten BEGIN cities. 18)Rethinking urban water
governance and infrastructure in Europe: Challenges and opportunities of
regionalization and organizational autonomy. 19)Sustainability Transitions
in Urban Water Management: Assessing the Robustness of Institutional
Arrangements. Part V: Urban Water Governance and Sustainability. 20)Urban
metabolism and water sensitive cities governance - Designing and evaluating
water-secure, resilient, sustainable, liveable cities. 21)Leveraging
Artificial Intelligence in Addressing Water Safety Challenges. 22)Political
ecologies of urban water governance. 23)Territorial Integration and
Innovation for Good Urban Water Governance. 24)Urban Water Security.
25)Urban Water Quality and Chemical Pollution. New Emerging contaminants:
Nanomaterials and Microplastics. Index.
List of Contributors. Introduction- Urban Water Governance: Approaching a
pressing environmental and social challenge. Part I: Technical and
historical aspects of Water supply systems. 1)Urban water cycle and
services: an integrative perspective. 2)Traditional systems of drinking
water delivery: technical aspects and sources. 3)Hybrid water supply
systems: resilience and implementability. 4)Urban water supply and life
cycle assessment. 5)Modelling Urban Water Infrastructure Renewal.
6)Territories and technologies: history and current trends of their
interaction in urban water services. Part II: Technical and historical
aspects of Wastewater systems. 7)Conventional systems for urban sanitation
and wastewater management in Middle and High income countries. 8)Sanitation
systems: Are hybrid systems sustainable or does winner takes all?
9)Management of Urban Drainage Infrastructure. 10)The history of
technological change in urban wastewater management, 1830-2010. Part III:
Regulation and Economic perspectives. 11)Institutional perspectives on
water services. 12)Fragmentation in Urban Water Governance: Navigating
Legal and Normative Modalities. 13)Revisiting the theory on the regulation
of water utilities: Evolution, challenges and trends. 14)Trends and
comparisons of outcomes between public and privately owned utilities.
15)Institutional, economic, and spatial barriers to water services delivery
in urban slums and informal settlements. Part IV: Political processes.
16)Actor networks in urban water governance. 17)Policy transfer in urban
water management: evidence from ten BEGIN cities. 18)Rethinking urban water
governance and infrastructure in Europe: Challenges and opportunities of
regionalization and organizational autonomy. 19)Sustainability Transitions
in Urban Water Management: Assessing the Robustness of Institutional
Arrangements. Part V: Urban Water Governance and Sustainability. 20)Urban
metabolism and water sensitive cities governance - Designing and evaluating
water-secure, resilient, sustainable, liveable cities. 21)Leveraging
Artificial Intelligence in Addressing Water Safety Challenges. 22)Political
ecologies of urban water governance. 23)Territorial Integration and
Innovation for Good Urban Water Governance. 24)Urban Water Security.
25)Urban Water Quality and Chemical Pollution. New Emerging contaminants:
Nanomaterials and Microplastics. Index.
pressing environmental and social challenge. Part I: Technical and
historical aspects of Water supply systems. 1)Urban water cycle and
services: an integrative perspective. 2)Traditional systems of drinking
water delivery: technical aspects and sources. 3)Hybrid water supply
systems: resilience and implementability. 4)Urban water supply and life
cycle assessment. 5)Modelling Urban Water Infrastructure Renewal.
6)Territories and technologies: history and current trends of their
interaction in urban water services. Part II: Technical and historical
aspects of Wastewater systems. 7)Conventional systems for urban sanitation
and wastewater management in Middle and High income countries. 8)Sanitation
systems: Are hybrid systems sustainable or does winner takes all?
9)Management of Urban Drainage Infrastructure. 10)The history of
technological change in urban wastewater management, 1830-2010. Part III:
Regulation and Economic perspectives. 11)Institutional perspectives on
water services. 12)Fragmentation in Urban Water Governance: Navigating
Legal and Normative Modalities. 13)Revisiting the theory on the regulation
of water utilities: Evolution, challenges and trends. 14)Trends and
comparisons of outcomes between public and privately owned utilities.
15)Institutional, economic, and spatial barriers to water services delivery
in urban slums and informal settlements. Part IV: Political processes.
16)Actor networks in urban water governance. 17)Policy transfer in urban
water management: evidence from ten BEGIN cities. 18)Rethinking urban water
governance and infrastructure in Europe: Challenges and opportunities of
regionalization and organizational autonomy. 19)Sustainability Transitions
in Urban Water Management: Assessing the Robustness of Institutional
Arrangements. Part V: Urban Water Governance and Sustainability. 20)Urban
metabolism and water sensitive cities governance - Designing and evaluating
water-secure, resilient, sustainable, liveable cities. 21)Leveraging
Artificial Intelligence in Addressing Water Safety Challenges. 22)Political
ecologies of urban water governance. 23)Territorial Integration and
Innovation for Good Urban Water Governance. 24)Urban Water Security.
25)Urban Water Quality and Chemical Pollution. New Emerging contaminants:
Nanomaterials and Microplastics. Index.