ABSTRACT

Just as space, territory and society can be socially and politically co-constructed, so can water, and thus the construction of hydraulic infrastructures can be mobilised by politicians to consolidate their grip on power while nurturing their own vision of what the nation is or should become. This book delves into the complex and often hidden connection between water, technological advancement and the nation-state, addressing two major questions. First, the arguments deployed consider how water as a resource can be ideologically constructed, imagined and framed to create and reinforce a national identity, and secondly, how the idea of a nation-state can and is materially co-constituted out of the material infrastructure through which water is harnessed and channelled.

The book consists of 13 theoretical and empirical interdisciplinary chapters covering four continents. The case studies cover a diverse range of geographical areas and countries, including China, Cyprus, Egypt, Ethiopia, France, Nepal and Thailand, and together illustrate that the meaning and rationale behind water infrastructures goes well beyond the control and regulation of water resources, as it becomes central in the unfolding of power dynamics across time and space.

chapter 1|18 pages

States of water

chapter 2|15 pages

The ocean bountiful?

De-salination, de-politicisation, and binational water governance on the Colorado River

chapter 3|15 pages

Piercing the Pyrenees, connecting Catalonia to Europe

The ascendancy and dismissal of the Rhône water transfer project (1994–2016)

chapter 4|16 pages

Death by certainty

The Vinça dam, the French state, and the changing social relations of the irrigation of the Têt basin of the Eastern French Pyrénées

chapter 5|16 pages

Big projects, strong states?

Large-scale investments in irrigation and state formation in the Beles Valley, Ethiopia

chapter 6|15 pages

Water nationalism in Egypt

State-building, nation-making and Nile hydropolitics

chapter 7|19 pages

Troubled waters of hegemony

Consent and contestation in Turkey’s hydropower landscapes 1

chapter 8|16 pages

An island of dams

Ethnic conflict and the contradictions of statehood in Cyprus

chapter 10|20 pages

Development initiatives and transboundary water politics in the Talas waterscape (Kyrgyzstan-Kazakhstan)

Towards the Conflicting Borderlands Hydrosocial Cycle 1

chapter 11|22 pages

Speculation and seismicity

Reconfiguring the hydropower future in post-earthquake Nepal