Urban geographies of waste

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Abstract

Through this virtual collection, we examine how urban geographers have described, characterized, theorized, and mobilized waste in the pages of Urban Geography since 1990. The articles we have selected demonstrate the changing dimensions of waste geographies, but also reflect changing areas of interest and evolving epistemologies that have shaped urban geography, more broadly. The collection reveals how urban waste assemblages are transformed by global processes–such as urbanization, neoliberal capitalism, colonialism–and mediated through local politics, planning, and the everyday actions of waste workers and other city dwellers, both human and non-human. Importantly, the articles also demonstrate how these dynamic and always-evolving relationships, in turn, transform urban space.

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APA

McClintock, N., & Morris, G. (2024). Urban geographies of waste. Urban Geography. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.1080/02723638.2024.2319437

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