Social Sciences, asked by chj770768, 3 months ago

explain the relation between water and society

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Answered by shaan559
0

Answer:

Hi mate here your answer

-- About 400 years ago, there was a city in Japan called Edo. Most of its one million people got clean water supplied close to their houses. Human excreta was not dumped into the river. It was used as agricultural fertiliser. The common people had a say in water management, which was based on economy and cost-effectiveness. The rivers were clean....

-- About 400 years ago, there was a city in Japan called Edo. Most of its one million people got clean water supplied close to their houses. Human excreta was not dumped into the river. It was used as agricultural fertiliser. The common people had a say in water management, which was based on economy and cost-effectiveness. The rivers were clean....About 2,300 years ago, there was a city to which all the roads led. The sewers of Rome, however, led to the Tiber river. Its water was unclean. Huge aqueducts -- the money for which came from plunder of other countries -- fetched water from distant springs. Water was supplied to tanks, from where slaves had to fetch it for the rich. Most of the water was reserved for the rich and the powerful....

-- About 400 years ago, there was a city in Japan called Edo. Most of its one million people got clean water supplied close to their houses. Human excreta was not dumped into the river. It was used as agricultural fertiliser. The common people had a say in water management, which was based on economy and cost-effectiveness. The rivers were clean....About 2,300 years ago, there was a city to which all the roads led. The sewers of Rome, however, led to the Tiber river. Its water was unclean. Huge aqueducts -- the money for which came from plunder of other countries -- fetched water from distant springs. Water was supplied to tanks, from where slaves had to fetch it for the rich. Most of the water was reserved for the rich and the powerful.... How do you provide water and sanitation to a city with one million people without exploiting your rivers and water sources, without putting filth into them? Not an easy question, by any means. If there were any easy answers, the state of rivers across the world would have been much better than it is today. Even rivers with a sacred religious status, like what the Ganga means to Hindus, have been polluted to an unimaginable degree.

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