List of Figures
List of Tables
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
John Richard Wagner
Part I: Commodification
Chapter 1. Contesting Equivalences:
Controversies over Water and Mining in Chile and Peru
Fabiana Li
Chapter 2. Dam Nation: Cubbie Station and the
Waters of the Darling
Veronica Strang
Chapter 3. Water and Ill-being: Displaced
People and Dam-based Development in India
Lyla
Mehta
Part II: Water and Technology
Chapter 4. Aesthetics of a Relationship: Women
and Water
Nefissa Naguib
Chapter 5. La Pila de San Juan: Historic
Transformations of Water as a Public Symbol in Suchitoto, El
Salvador
Hugo De Burgos
Chapter 6. Not so Boring. Assembling and
Reassembling Groundwater Tales and Technologies from Malerkotla,
Punjab
Rita Brara
Chapter 7. Kenyan Landscape, Identity and
Access
Swathi Veeravali
Part III: Urbanization
Chapter 8. Health Challenges of Urban Poverty
and Water Supply in Northern Ghana
Issaka Kanton Osumanu
Chapter 9. The Risk of Water: Dengue Prevention
and Control in Urban Cambodia
Sarah C. Smith
Chapter 10. The Water Crisis in Ireland: The
Socio-Political Contexts of Risk in Contemporary Society
Liam Leonard
Part IV: Governance
Chapter 11. Fairness and the Human Right to
Water: A Preliminary Cross-cultural Theory
Amber Wutich, Alexandra Brewis, Sveinn Sigurdsson, Rhian Stotts,
and Abigail York
Chapter 12. Indigenous Water Governance and
Resistance: A Syilx Perspective
Marlowe Sam and Jeannette Armstrong
Chapter 13. Bureaucratic Bricolage and
Adaptive Co-management in Indonesian Irrigation
Bryan Bruns
Chapter 14. Anthropological Insights into
Stakeholder Participation in Water Management of the Edwards
Aquifer in Texas
John M. Donahue
Index
John R. Wagner is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia, Okanagan. He conducts research in Canada, the United States and Papua New Guinea and has published several journal articles on water governance in the Okanagan Valley. In 2007 he was lead guest editor of Customs, Commons, Property and Ecology, a special edition of Human Organization devoted to an analysis of Pacific Island customary property rights systems. Recent publications include “Water and the Commons Imaginary” in the Public Anthropology Forum of Current Anthropology (2012).
“The Social Life of Water successfully addresses a wide range of issues concerning the meanings and uses of water in relation to culture, society, and development. As a volume, it shows how a focus on social life opens up new analytical possibilities of broader relevance to the study of water. Moreover, many of the chapters explore contexts and regions not previously covered in work on these topics.” · Journal of Royal Anthropological Institute “…this volume [is to be] recommended to readers interested in the anthropology of water and to those who wish to teach a course on the subject for both undergraduate and graduate students. The diversity of the topics covered in the book and the methodological and theoretical issues raised, provide several excellent teachable moments not to be missed. It also testifies to the richness of topics and ways in which the social lives of water can and should be explored by anthropologists in the future.” · Anthropological Notebooks “For anthropologists working in the water field, the book provides useful material to help the water field incorporate good social practice, research and theory into a transdisciplinary field currently interested in incorporating it into policy and management.” · Water Alternatives “This book fills an important niche on water related issues in anthropology by focusing on social and cultural manifestations of water management, use, and conflict… The organization is appropriate and effective.” · Benedict J. Colombi, American Indian Studies Program, University of Arizona
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