We cast a spotlight on the domestic scale as a critical, yet overlooked, vantage point for understanding urban socio-ecological relations in a context of inequality and climate change.
Is produced place in which interdependent social, material and ecological processes unfold in and around the domestic, but are not independent of broader socio-economic power relations and ecological dynamics.
Combining multi-modal ethnography with water-quality analysis, we do not treat global south cities as sources of data or outliers but sites of theorization in their own right.
About the Project