Water Justice--The Book
In naming this blogsite, I encountered a new book (2018) with the title Water Justice, Cambridge University Press. So as not to offend the sensibilities of its authors, Rutgers Boelens, Jeroen Vos and Tom Perreault, I wrote to Professors Boelens and Pearreault only to find two like minds. Their work falls, they say, within the field of "political ecology." I would have said "water politics" or "water law." Their "questions address fundamental issues
regarding how water scarcity is being constructed by dominant agents, and how
power relations influence water knowledge and development to produce particular
claims to truth." These questions "intrinsically engage research and
transdisciplinary social action, focusing for instance on how knowledge
production can contribute to strategies that contest water dispossession and
accumulation; and how the knowledge systems of scholars, activists and water
users can be mutually enriching and complementary."
From the position of academe, the three professors continue in their introductory chapter:
“[W]e base our understandings of “water justice” on a notion
that sees environmental governance not as the “governance of nature” but “as
‘governance through nature’ – that is, as the reflection and projection of
economic and political power via decisions about the design, manipulation and
control of socio- natural processes” (Bridge and Perreault, 2009 : 492). More
specifically, we situate “water justice” conceptually and politically in the field
of the “political ecology of water,” which may be defined as: “the politics and
power relationships that shape human knowledge of and intervention in the water
world, leading to forms of governing nature and people, at once and at
different scales, to produce particular hydro- social order” (Boelens 2015a :
9). This political ecology of water thus focuses on unequal distribution of
benefits and burdens, access to and control over water, winners and losers, and
disputed water rights, knowledge, and culture. It is also about practical and
theoretical efforts to build alternative water realities.”
“The combination of intensified resource extraction, land
and water degradation, increasing competition over water access and control,
and growing reliance on market forces and forms of water expertocracy, have
profound implications for debates over water rights and justice. On the one
hand, it is increasingly clear that water scarcity and insecurity are not so
much related to the absolute availability of fresh and clean water, but rather
are expressions of how water, and water services, are unequally distributed
among societal groups. Unequal water distribution and exposure to contaminated
water, flooding and failed water projects often reveal elite capture of the
state and related biased policies and corrupt practices. In other words, the
so-called “water crisis” is less a consequence of generalized scarcity than a
manifestation of uneven power geometries (UNDP, 2006 ). On the other hand, the
mainstream water policy community tends to avoid scrutinizing the root causes
of water problems. Instead, in accordance with its own positivist, universalist
epistemologies and its belief in expert knowledge systems, formal legal
structures and market forces, it blames the victims: local water user
groups, communities and their “chaotic, inefficient plural rights systems”
(Boelens and Zwarteveen, 2005 ).”
“[U]nderstanding and challenging water injustices requires
conceptual tools to recognize the power and politics of water use, management
and governance. Beyond their expression in laws, explicit rules and formal
hierarchies, . . . power and politics also significantly work through more
invisible norms and rules that present themselves as naturally or technically
ordered. These rules are part of established water development intervention
procedures and practices, and are embedded in water expert communities’
cultural codes of behavior (Zwarteveen and Boelens, 2014 ).”
Heady thoughts. Thank you, gentlemen.
J. Davenport
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