Liquid Relations
Contested Water Rights and Legal Complexity
Dik Roth editor Rutgerd Boelens editor Margreet Zwarteveen editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Rutgers University Press
Published:21st Nov '05
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Water management plays an increasingly critical role in national and international policy agendas. Growing scarcity, overuse, and pollution, combined with burgeoning demand, have made socio-political and economic conflicts almost unavoidable. Proposals to address water shortages are usually based on two key assumptions: (1) water is a commodity that can be bought and sold and (2) ""states,"" or other centralized entities, should control access to water. Liquid Relations criticizes these assumptions from a socio-legal perspective. Eleven case studies examine laws, distribution, and irrigation in regions around the world, including the United States, Nepal, Indonesia, Chile, Ecuador, India, and South Africa. In each case, problems are shown to be both ecological and human-made-the locally specific outcomes of social, political, and environmental histories. The essays also consider the ways that gender, ethnicity, and class differences influence water rights and control. In the concluding chapter, the editors draw on the essays' findings to offer an alternative approach to water rights and water governance issues. By showing how issues like water scarcity and competition are embedded in specific resource use and management histories, this volume highlights the need for analyses and solutions that are context-specific rather than universal.
This book makes the legal complexities of water resource management and irrigation very clear, illustrating the dilemma in responding to the multiplicity of water rights. I recommend this as required reading for any course that treats issues of water management in developing countries.-Gilbert Levine, Professor Emeritus, Cornell University. ""Well-written and incisive, the essays in Liquid Relations are notable for their theoretical sophistication and wide global reach. It is a landmark, ground-breaking work on one of the important issues of our time.""-Paul H. Gelles, author of Water and Power in Highland Peru: The Cultural Politics of Irrigation and Development. ""This book makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the global problem of increasing competition for fresh water by applying the insights of legal pluralism to the understudied issue of water rights.""-Robert C. Hunt, Brandeis University.
ISBN: 9780813536750
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 526g
352 pages