Abstract: Inequalities in conditions of access to water are emblematic of contemporary urban life and have long been at the center of urban scholarship. This paper considers the theoretical and empirical potential of a focus on the everyday as a contribution to critical urban water studies. Drawing on research in Political Ecology and Critical Institutionalism, we focus on the intersection of everyday urbanism and water to reflect on whether such perspectives can further understandings of socio‐natural inequalities and “real” governance challenges in the urban waterscape. We suggest that a focus on the everyday brings attention to the hybrid arrangements that constitute urban waterscapes and offers new insights to the polycentric nature of ...
In this article, we explore elements of the literature on practices and the everyday to provide refe...
While urban political ecology convincingly shows how social and technological power relations create...
The urban water sector in industrialised countries is transitioning towards a new paradigm, usually ...
Most of the world's population lives in urban areas, and the population concentration in urban centr...
Water is one of the most pressing concerns of our time. This book argues for the importance of water...
This paper focuses on patterns of domestic water consumption. It develops an approach that emphasise...
This special issue explores the realities of water provision in 'informal' urban spaces located in d...
This special issue explores the realities of water provision in 'informal' urban spaces located in d...
This article examines the social representations of water in urban cultures of Argentina...
This paper examines everyday practices of self-construction and connection, negotiation, and self-di...
The waterscape is a perspective that has captured the imagination of diversescholars interested in t...
Water and habit are rarely read together. In this chapter I propose a corrective to this by consider...
This thesis focuses on the ‘everyday politics of water’ inside a single informal settlement in Kathm...
This paper argues that the expansion of corporate social responsibility initiatives within the Engli...
This article responds to both ongoing urban practices and strands of urban theory by arguing for a (...
In this article, we explore elements of the literature on practices and the everyday to provide refe...
While urban political ecology convincingly shows how social and technological power relations create...
The urban water sector in industrialised countries is transitioning towards a new paradigm, usually ...
Most of the world's population lives in urban areas, and the population concentration in urban centr...
Water is one of the most pressing concerns of our time. This book argues for the importance of water...
This paper focuses on patterns of domestic water consumption. It develops an approach that emphasise...
This special issue explores the realities of water provision in 'informal' urban spaces located in d...
This special issue explores the realities of water provision in 'informal' urban spaces located in d...
This article examines the social representations of water in urban cultures of Argentina...
This paper examines everyday practices of self-construction and connection, negotiation, and self-di...
The waterscape is a perspective that has captured the imagination of diversescholars interested in t...
Water and habit are rarely read together. In this chapter I propose a corrective to this by consider...
This thesis focuses on the ‘everyday politics of water’ inside a single informal settlement in Kathm...
This paper argues that the expansion of corporate social responsibility initiatives within the Engli...
This article responds to both ongoing urban practices and strands of urban theory by arguing for a (...
In this article, we explore elements of the literature on practices and the everyday to provide refe...
While urban political ecology convincingly shows how social and technological power relations create...
The urban water sector in industrialised countries is transitioning towards a new paradigm, usually ...