DownloadThe Portobello Bookshop Gift Guide 2024

Water, Power and Identity

The Cultural Politics of Water in the Andes

Rutgerd Boelens author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd

Published:2nd Dec '16

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Water, Power and Identity cover

This insightful book, Water, Power and Identity, examines the tensions between grassroots water management and overarching policy frameworks while highlighting struggles for water rights.

This book explores two significant challenges in the realms of natural resource management and political ecology. It delves into the intricate and often conflicting relationship between local communities managing water resources and the national or global policy-making institutions that influence these dynamics. The author examines how grassroots movements defend against encroachment and question the prevailing narratives of State and market-driven water governance. By confronting coercive measures and participatory boundary policing, communities strive to assert their rights and redefine their water management practices.

In Water, Power and Identity, the focus shifts to the grassroots efforts in constructing multi-layered water-rights territories. The text highlights the vigorous attempts by State, market, and expert networks to reshape these water societies to fit dominant frameworks. This reshaping often involves seizing resources and aligning users within a universalized water culture, which can exacerbate existing water security issues rather than resolving them. However, the book also emphasizes the role of social struggles in negotiating and enforcing water rights, showcasing how user collectives challenge imposed identities and rights systems.

The author illustrates that the battles for material control over water are intertwined with the cultural and political definitions of water rights. Through Andean examples from Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Chile, the narrative reveals the complexities of hydro-social networks. These case studies demonstrate how water justice struggles serve as political projects aimed at addressing indifference, advocating for re-distributive policies, and expanding context-specific definitions of water rights and governance forms.

"Water, Power and Identity is a true masterwork. Drawing on decades of experience in the Andean region, Rutgerd Boelens has produced a wide-ranging and complex account of grassroots struggles for water rights and cultural autonomy. It is among the most authoritative volumes ever produced on Latin American water politics."Tom Perreault, Professor of Geography, Syracuse University, USA.

"Rutgerd Boelens has established himself as a leader in the area of the cultural politics of water in the Andes. This book brings together much of his research and thinking. Water, Power and Identity offers a challenging and thought-provoking contribution to debates on law and nature, environmental governance, and political ecologies of state-making and resistance. Very important reading."Anthony Bebbington, Professor of Environment and Society and Director of the Graduate School of Geography, Clark University, USA.

"This book demonstrates conclusively that water rights are never given or distributed, but taken and fought for. Rarely before has the intimate relationship between power and water been so incisively dissected. A must-read for those concerned with how power shapes life and how communities struggle for their right to water."Erik Swyngedouw, Professor of Geography, University of Manchester, UK, Author of Social Power and the Urbanization of Water and Liquid Power.

"A breath-taking discussion on normalization, showing how different modes of power often fuse together and make for all new kinds of dazzling phenomena. Of outstanding scientific quality, the book will be recognized by experts in the field as highly distinctive. The work is built on many years of consistent fieldwork (conducted in several Andean countries) and reflects broad engagement and a multi-method approach. The work stands out as a masterpiece of conceptual integration: the interdisciplinary approach on which it is built embraces sociology, peasant studies, irrigation studies, legal anthropology, gender studies, political sciences, history and philosophy." Jan Douwe van der Ploeg, Professor of Transition Studies, Wageningen University, Netherlands.

"Extremely broad in its theoretical scope, and at the same time very attentive to detail in the case material discussed, the analysis is incisive and consistently provocative. Boelens brings a sharply critical eye to the institutions surrounding irrigation, whether these are the large irrigation projects and the "experts" who direct them, or the small peasant-managed systems that also have their own forms of exclusion and domination. Without exaggeration, I can say that this is the most comprehensive and theoretically sophisticated work on Andean irrigation that I have encountered in my more than twenty-five years working in this field." Paul H. Gelles, Author of Water and Power in Highland Peru.

ISBN: 9781138628922

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 453g

388 pages