Polluted Rivers, Infrastructure, and the Politics of Multispecies Health in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Principal Investigator: Dr. Valentin Meilinger

The project studies urban water pollution as a problem of the Anthropocene, where societies face the increasingly health-threatening urban ecologies they have coproduced. Technology plays a vital, but little explicitly studied, political role in how actors understand and address entwined environmental and health challenges in cities. Through a case study of urban river pollution and water supply in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the project explores the political role of technology and its relations with nonhuman life in producing and remaking unhealthy urban environments. Hereby, it aims to uncover how system-based approaches to urban nature–specifically planetary health–that become realized through technology, shape unhealthy urban environments and their governance.

Funded by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) – Project number 545739306