Publication
Title
Food from country to city, waste from city to country: an environmental symbiosis? Fertiliser improvement in eighteenth-century Flanders
Author
Abstract
Alternative approaches to resolve bottlenecks in food production often champion the reuse of urban organic waste as fertiliser in agriculture in order to close the nutrient cycle between city and country (cradle to cradle). References are often made to the past because environmental historians tend to work the use of urban wastes into a story of environmental symbiosis between city and countryside. This article argues, however, that closed nutrient cycles did not exist even in pre-industrial society, as the way in which agriculture was structured had a huge impact on the demand for manure. Starting from two agricultural regions in eighteenthcentury Flanders, this research calls for more attention to regional structures of agriculture in which cities were embedded and to how these agro-systems shaped nutrient flows from the city to the country by very diverse patterns of demand for fertilisers, leading to unequal redistributive flows of nutrients from towns to different agricultural regions.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Journal for the History of Environment and Society (Printed). - Turnhout, 2016, currens
Journal for the history of environment and society. - Turnhout, 2016, currens
Publication
Turnhout : Brepols , 2017
ISSN
2506-6730
DOI
10.1484/J.JHES.5.114102
Volume/pages
2 (2017) , p. 25-61
Number
2506-6730
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (publisher's version - intranet only)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
VABB-SHW
Record
Identifier
Creation 25.10.2017
Last edited 25.05.2022
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