This is an exploration of the River Lee from its source above Luton to where it meets the Thames at Leamouth. The context is the AHRC funded Hydrocitizenship programme that aimed to explore the evolving relationship between communities and water through research by eight academic partners across four distinct case study sites across the UK. These are Shipley, Yorkshire, Borth, Mid Wales, Bristol and the Lee Valley. My strategy was to walk the river to gain insight into how it is managed along its entire course and to explore the intricacies of a waterway that has to function as a navigation, source of potable water, drain, flood relief facility, biodiverse habitat, recreational amenity and visitor attraction, yet retain a sense of integrity
For centuries, dwelling on the water has been a traditional way of life for many cultures around the...
Drawing Waters is a series of participatory walks and visual fieldwork exercises developed and execu...
The Hogsmill, a tributary of the Thames and now one of London’s lost rivers was used as the rural se...
The sustainability of communities will be closely associated with their use of water. In particular,...
Between 2008–13 Cooke’s research has focused specifically on riparian landscapes and the ecologies b...
This chapter is based on primary research and fieldwork in the Lower Lee Valley, East London. It ari...
Public Project ReportThis project combined a podcast and audio workshop to explore the cultural and ...
This paper is about the ways in which anglers read rivers as landscapes, as contexts and as places i...
Estuary, Beacon and Hadleigh-in-Place are elements of a research based project examining the landsca...
Over the last five centuries, North-East England’s River Tyne went largely with the flow as it rode ...
The European Union has contributed funds to the restoration of rivers in the UK and in Denmark throu...
As a result of climate change, there has been a shift in the global weather pattern. The hydrologica...
ccording to a number of studies published on the Carmel River, the lower 15 miles are subject to flo...
Severe floods on the Somerset Levels in winter 2014, and a series of other recent extreme floods acr...
Framed by questions about ‘hydrocitizenship’ in the 21st century, this co-produced, interdisciplinar...
For centuries, dwelling on the water has been a traditional way of life for many cultures around the...
Drawing Waters is a series of participatory walks and visual fieldwork exercises developed and execu...
The Hogsmill, a tributary of the Thames and now one of London’s lost rivers was used as the rural se...
The sustainability of communities will be closely associated with their use of water. In particular,...
Between 2008–13 Cooke’s research has focused specifically on riparian landscapes and the ecologies b...
This chapter is based on primary research and fieldwork in the Lower Lee Valley, East London. It ari...
Public Project ReportThis project combined a podcast and audio workshop to explore the cultural and ...
This paper is about the ways in which anglers read rivers as landscapes, as contexts and as places i...
Estuary, Beacon and Hadleigh-in-Place are elements of a research based project examining the landsca...
Over the last five centuries, North-East England’s River Tyne went largely with the flow as it rode ...
The European Union has contributed funds to the restoration of rivers in the UK and in Denmark throu...
As a result of climate change, there has been a shift in the global weather pattern. The hydrologica...
ccording to a number of studies published on the Carmel River, the lower 15 miles are subject to flo...
Severe floods on the Somerset Levels in winter 2014, and a series of other recent extreme floods acr...
Framed by questions about ‘hydrocitizenship’ in the 21st century, this co-produced, interdisciplinar...
For centuries, dwelling on the water has been a traditional way of life for many cultures around the...
Drawing Waters is a series of participatory walks and visual fieldwork exercises developed and execu...
The Hogsmill, a tributary of the Thames and now one of London’s lost rivers was used as the rural se...