March 17, 2026
|9780822968207|Technology, Politics, and Environmentalism, 1945–2005|Perched on the Eastern Continental Divide, Atlanta has always been a hard place to manage water—and to keep its waste out of sight. Atlanta’s Water Wars follows the development of the city’s water and sewer system from the postwar push for Buford Dam and metropolitan expansion to the Clean Water Act, civil rights battles inside City Hall, neighborhood environmental justice campaigns, and lawsuits. It opens with the spectacular 1993 Orme Street sewer collapse and uses that catastrophe to uncover decades of deferred maintenance, racial inequality, and fragmented governance beneath a booming Sunbelt metropolis. Tracing the rise…