ABSTRACT

This book addresses two major issues in natural resource management and political ecology: the complex conflicting relationship between communities managing water on the ground and national/global policy-making institutions and elites; and how grassroots defend against encroachment, question the self-evidence of State-/market-based water governance, and confront coercive and participatory boundary policing (‘normal’ vs. ‘abnormal’). 

The book examines grassroots building of multi-layered water-rights territories, and State, market and expert networks’ vigorous efforts to reshape these water societies in their own image – seizing resources and/or aligning users, identities and rights systems within dominant frameworks. Distributive and cultural politics entwine. It is shown that attempts to modernize and normalize users through universalized water culture, ‘rational water use’ and de-politicized interventions deepen water security problems rather than alleviating them. However, social struggles negotiate and enforce water rights. User collectives challenge imposed water rights and identities, constructing new ones to strategically acquire water control autonomy and re-moralize their waterscapes. 

The author shows that battles for material control include the right to culturally define and politically organize water rights and territories. Andean illustrations from Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia and Chile, from peasant-indigenous life stories to international policy-making, highlight open and subsurface hydro-social networks. They reveal how water justice struggles are political projects against indifference, and that engaging in re-distributive policies and defying ‘truth politics,’ extends context-particular water rights definitions and governance forms.

chapter 1|38 pages

Introduction

Water-control battlefields

chapter 3|34 pages

Regimes of water truth

Interdisciplinarity, domains of water control and hydrosocial cycle politics

chapter 5|30 pages

The hydro-politics of identity

Coercive and capillary powers

chapter 7|31 pages

Expertocratizing local water rights

chapter 9|44 pages

Resistance as ‘con-fusion'

Mimesis, mimicry and contesting the dream scheme

chapter 10|21 pages

Conclusions and reflections

Powers of illusion and forces of con-fusion