Journal Article

Land Use Policy 70

Towards a Peri-Urban Political Ecology of Water Quality Decline

Published on 1 January 2018

Recent years have witnessed an expanding body of peri-urban and urban scholarship. However, recent scholarship has yet to adequately address the central role of politics and power shaping water quality decline. The article focuses on the trans-Hindon region which is part of Ghaziabad city, close to India’s capital, Delhi.

We draw upon urban political ecology and peri-urban scholarship to explain the role of politics and power shaping water quality decline. We argue in favour of creating stronger synergy between peri-urban and UPE debates as part of conceptualizing water quality decline. The article shows that as a complex socio-political challenge, water quality decline is centrally shaped by the intensifying linkages between urban and peri-urban forms of development and as a result deserves central attention as part of both these debates.

Authors

Lyla Mehta

Professorial Fellow

Fiona Marshall

Publication details

published by
Elsevier
authors
Timothy Karpouzoglou
journal
Land Use Policy, volume 70
language
English

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