TY - JOUR
T1 - A socio-technical model to explore urban water systems scenarios
AU - De Haan, Fjalar J.
AU - Ferguson, Briony C.
AU - Deletic, Ana
AU - Brown, Rebekah R.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - This article reports on the ongoing work and research involved in the development of a sociotechnical model of urban water systems. Socio-technical means the model is not so much concerned with the technical or biophysical aspects of urban water systems, but rather with the social and institutional implications of the urban water infrastructure and vice versa. A socio-technical model, in the view purported in this article, produces scenarios of different urban water servicing solutions gaining or losing influence in meeting water-related societal needs, like potable water, drainage, environmental health and amenity. The urban water system is parameterised with vectors of the relative influence of each servicing solution. The model is a software implementation of the Multi-Pattern Approach, a theory on societal systems, like urban water systems, and how these develop and go through transitions under various internal and external conditions. Acknowledging that social dynamics comes with severe and non-reducible uncertainties, the model is set up to be exploratory, meaning that for any initial condition several possible future scenarios are produced. This article gives a concise overview of the necessary theoretical background, the model architecture and some initial test results using a drainage example.
AB - This article reports on the ongoing work and research involved in the development of a sociotechnical model of urban water systems. Socio-technical means the model is not so much concerned with the technical or biophysical aspects of urban water systems, but rather with the social and institutional implications of the urban water infrastructure and vice versa. A socio-technical model, in the view purported in this article, produces scenarios of different urban water servicing solutions gaining or losing influence in meeting water-related societal needs, like potable water, drainage, environmental health and amenity. The urban water system is parameterised with vectors of the relative influence of each servicing solution. The model is a software implementation of the Multi-Pattern Approach, a theory on societal systems, like urban water systems, and how these develop and go through transitions under various internal and external conditions. Acknowledging that social dynamics comes with severe and non-reducible uncertainties, the model is set up to be exploratory, meaning that for any initial condition several possible future scenarios are produced. This article gives a concise overview of the necessary theoretical background, the model architecture and some initial test results using a drainage example.
KW - Exploratory modelling
KW - Multi-Pattern Approach
KW - Scenario
KW - Socio-technical
KW - Transitions
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84881539429&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2166/wst.2013.299
DO - 10.2166/wst.2013.299
M3 - Article
C2 - 23925202
AN - SCOPUS:84881539429
SN - 0273-1223
VL - 68
SP - 714
EP - 721
JO - Water Science and Technology
JF - Water Science and Technology
IS - 3
ER -