Origins of the Flint Water Crisis: Uneven Development, Urban Political Ecology, and Racial Capitalism

Author:

Foote Aaron1ORCID,de Leon Cedric2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Central Michigan University, Mt. Pleasant, MI, USA

2. University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA, USA

Abstract

What conditions gave rise to the Flint Water Crisis? Students of contemporary urban disasters tend to advance two claims, increasingly in tandem. First, preexisting racial and class inequalities structure both the impact of disasters on urban communities and the dynamics of resettlement. Second and similarly, neoliberalism (variously theorized as neoliberal urbanism and the growth machine) prefigures urban disasters and underpins an ensuing market-oriented process of redevelopment. While long-standing patterns of inequality and neoliberalization are important contextual factors, by themselves they tend to undertheorize the timing and ecological content of urban crises. In this article, we synthesize the literature on uneven development, urban political ecology, and racial capitalism to advance an alternative hypothesis. Drawing on interviews with Flint residents and Michigan officials, the archival correspondence of government agencies, and ethnographic data, we argue that the Flint Water Crisis was the consequence of an extractivist project of White state and suburban actors to “regionalize” and thereby expropriate the assets and natural resources controlled by the predominantly Black working-class city of Detroit. Specifically, the formation of two regional water authorities required that Flint leave the Detroit Water and Sewer Department for an interim water source, the Flint River, which had been contaminated by decades of automotive toxins.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies

Reference79 articles.

1. Acosta Roberto. 2017. “Multiple People Arrested at Flint Water Town Hall Meeting.” MLive, April 21. Retrieved July 7, 2021 (https://www.mlive.com/news/flint/2017/04/multiple_arrests_made_at_flint.html).

2. Markets of Sorrow, Labors of Faith

3. CHARACTERISTIC OF DYNAMIC LUNG VOLUMES, SPARE CAPACITIES AND VENTILATION EFFECTIVENESS IN FAR NORTH RESIDENTS DURING CONTRASTIVE YEAR SEASONS

4. Badger Emily. 2014. “The Terrible Choices Detroit Confronts as It Cuts off Water to Its Own Residents.” The Washington Post, July 19. Retrieved August 31, 2022 (https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2014/07/19/the-terrible-choices-detroit-confronts-as-it-cuts-off-water-to-its-own-residents/).

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1. Environmentalizing Urban Sociology;City & Community;2023-10-31

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