Sinking Chicago: Climate Change and the Remaking of a Flood-Prone Environment
Hardback Published on: 09/03/2018
Price: £80.00
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Synopsis
In *Sinking Chicago,* Harold Platt shows how people responded to climate change in one American city over a hundred-and-fifty-year period. During a long dry spell before 1945, city residents lost sight of the connections between land use, flood control, and water quality. Then, a combination of suburban sprawl and a wet period of extreme weather events created damaging runoff surges that sank Chicago and contaminated drinking supplies with raw sewage.
Chicagoans had to learn how to remake a city built on a prairie wetland. They organized a grassroots movement to protect the six river watersheds in the semi-sacred forest preserves from being turned into open sewers, like the Chicago River. The politics of outdoor recreation clashed with the politics of water management. Platt charts a growing constituency of citizens who fought a corrupt political machine to reclaim the region's waterways and Lake Michigan as a single eco-system. Environmentalists contested policymakers' heroic, big-technology approaches with small-scale solutions for a flood-prone environment. *Sinking Chicago* lays out a roadmap to future planning outcomes.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Temple University Press
- ISBN: 9781439915486
- Number of pages: 295
- Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 23 mm
- Weight: 612g
- Languages: English
