ABSTRACT

The right to clean water has been adopted by the United Nations as a basic human right. Yet how such universal calls for a right to water are understood, negotiated, experienced and struggled over remain key challenges. The Right to Water elucidates how universal calls for rights articulate with local historical geographical contexts, governance, politics and social struggles, thereby highlighting the challenges and the possibilities that exist. Bringing together a unique range of academics, policy-makers and activists, the book analyzes how struggles for the right to water have attempted to translate moral arguments over access to safe water into workable claims. This book is an intervention at a crucial moment into the shape and future direction of struggles for the right to water in a range of political, geographic and socio-economics contexts, seeking to be pro-active in defining what this struggle could mean and how it might be taken forward in a far broader transformative politics.

The Right to Water engages with a range of approaches that focus on philosophical, legal and governance perspectives before seeking to apply these more abstract arguments to an array of concrete struggles and case studies. In so doing, the book builds on empirical examples from Africa, Asia, Oceania, Latin America, the Middle East, North America and the European Union.

chapter |18 pages

The right to water

Prospects and possibilities

chapter |26 pages

Commons versus commodities

Debating the human right to water

chapter |16 pages

The human right to what?

Water, rights, humans, and the relation of things

chapter |17 pages

A right to water?

Geographico-legal perspectives

chapter |16 pages

The political economy of the right to water

Reinvigorating the question of property

chapter |16 pages

Scarce or insecure?

The right to water and the ethics of global water governance

chapter |13 pages

The right to water as the right to identity

Legal struggles of indigenous peoples of Aotearoa New Zealand

chapter |20 pages

Rights, citizenship and territory

Water politics in the West Bank

chapter |15 pages

Water rights and wrongs

Illegality and informal use in Mexico and the U.S.

chapter |16 pages

The right to the city and the eco-social commoning of water

Discursive and political lessons from South Africa

chapter |17 pages

Anti-privatization struggles and the right to water in India

Engendering cultures of opposition

chapter |16 pages

From Cochabamba to Colombia

Travelling repertoires in Latin American water struggles