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The water-sustainable city Science, policy and practice

By: Publication details: London Edward Elgar 2017Description: 197P xiii HBISBN:
  • 9781783478552
DDC classification:
  • 711 FEL
Contents:
Contents: PART I: OUR UNCERTAIN WATER FUTURE, OUR PRECARIOUS WATER PAST 1. Introduction – What Would A Contents: PART I: OUR UNCERTAIN WATER FUTURE, OUR PRECARIOUS WATER PAST 1. Introduction: What Would a Water Sustainable City Look Like? 2. Lessons for an Urban Ecology of Water: Historical Views, Environmental Experiences 3. Roles for Civil Engineering, Law and Institutions in Urban Water Management 4. Divergent Approaches: A Typology of Traditional and Contemporary Alternatives As Seen In Los Angeles and Melbourne; PART II: TRADITIONAL AND CONTEMPORARY APPROACHES TO WATER MANAGEMENT AND POLICY INNOVATION 5. The Water-Energy Footprint of Large Cities: Productivity and Transitional Development 6. How Cities Value Water and Why It Matters: Economic and Non-Economic Approaches; PART III: THE PATH FORWARD: TECHNOLOGY, INFRASTRUCTURE, INSTITUTIONS, PRACTICES 7. Opportunities to Satisfy Urban Water Needs While Addressing the Urban Stream Syndrome 8. Low Impact Development: Indoor and Outdoor Innovations 9. New Forms of Management and Governance for Urban Water Sustainability 10. Conclusions: Some Future Research Needs; REFERENCES Index
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode
BOOKs BOOKs National Law School MPP SECTIO MPP Section 711 FEL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 35560

Muncipal Water Supply

Water-Supply Engineering

Contents: PART I: OUR UNCERTAIN WATER FUTURE, OUR PRECARIOUS WATER PAST 1. Introduction – What Would A Contents:

PART I: OUR UNCERTAIN WATER FUTURE, OUR PRECARIOUS WATER PAST
1. Introduction: What Would a Water Sustainable City Look Like?
2. Lessons for an Urban Ecology of Water: Historical Views, Environmental Experiences
3. Roles for Civil Engineering, Law and Institutions in Urban Water Management
4. Divergent Approaches: A Typology of Traditional and Contemporary Alternatives As Seen In Los Angeles and Melbourne;

PART II: TRADITIONAL AND CONTEMPORARY APPROACHES TO WATER MANAGEMENT AND POLICY INNOVATION
5. The Water-Energy Footprint of Large Cities: Productivity and Transitional Development
6. How Cities Value Water and Why It Matters: Economic and Non-Economic Approaches;

PART III: THE PATH FORWARD: TECHNOLOGY, INFRASTRUCTURE, INSTITUTIONS, PRACTICES
7. Opportunities to Satisfy Urban Water Needs While Addressing the Urban Stream Syndrome
8. Low Impact Development: Indoor and Outdoor Innovations
9. New Forms of Management and Governance for Urban Water Sustainability
10. Conclusions: Some Future Research Needs;
REFERENCES
Index

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