美国城市中的不平等、住房危机和日益恶化的用水状况

Katie Meehan, Jason R. Jurjevich, Lucy Everitt, Nicholas M.J.W. Chun, Justin Sherrill
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摘要

住房负担不起和生活成本危机正影响着美国城市中的数百万人,但其对城市居民的福祉和社会再生产的影响仍不十分明确。本文对 1970 年以来美国 50 个最大城市的家庭自来水获取情况(社会基础设施的重要组成部分)进行了纵向分析。结果表明,自 2008 年全球金融风暴以来,越来越多美国城市的自来水供应情况恶化,15 个最大城市中有 12 个城市的有色人种家庭受到了严重影响。我们提供的证据表明,"生殖挤压"--对家庭日常和社会再生产能力的系统性、复合性压力--正在迫使城市家庭做出更不稳定的生活安排,包括没有自来水的住房。我们分析了俄勒冈州波特兰市的案例研究,以说明住房危机下生殖挤压的种族性质。我们的见解揭示了水管贫困--缺乏家庭自来水--的范围和严重程度正在向更广泛的美国城市扩展,这让人怀疑在日益城市化的美国实现人人享有清洁水和卫生设施的可持续发展目标(SDG 6)和可持续城市目标(SDG 11)的公平进展。米汉及其同事对 1970 年以来美国大城市的自来水获取情况进行了研究,发现 2008 年的金融危机加剧了许多城市家庭的 "管道贫困"。这对有色人种家庭的影响尤为严重,并普遍将低收入家庭挤压到更不稳定的生活环境中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Urban inequality, the housing crisis and deteriorating water access in US cities
The housing unaffordability and cost-of-living crisis is affecting millions of people in US cities, yet the implications for urban dwellers’ well-being and social reproduction remain less clear. This Article presents a longitudinal analysis of household access to running water—a vital component of social infrastructure—in the 50 largest US cities since 1970. The results indicate that water access has worsened in an increasing number and typology of US cities since the 2008 global financial crash, disproportionately affecting households of color in 12 of the 15 largest cities. We provide evidence to suggest that a ‘reproductive squeeze’—systemic, compounding pressures on households’ capacity to reproduce themselves on a daily and societal basis—is forcing urban households into more precarious living arrangements, including housing without running water. We analyze the case study of Portland (Oregon) to illustrate the racialized nature of the reproductive squeeze under a housing crisis. Our insights reveal that plumbing poverty—a lack of household running water—is expanding in scope and severity to a broader array of US cities, raising doubts about equitable progress towards Sustainable Development Goals for clean water and sanitation for all (SDG 6) and sustainable cities (SDG 11) in an increasingly urbanized United States. Meehan and colleagues study access to running water in large US cities since 1970, finding that the 2008 financial crisis worsened household ‘plumbing poverty’ in many cities. This disproportionately impacted households of color and generally squeezed lower-income households into more precarious living situations.
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