As concerns over climate change intensify, anthropologists have emerged as key participants in conversations about water use. Such work is crucial not only to assess the implications of floods, droughts and water rights conflicts today, but also the ways in which water has always been a mediated resource, and how communities’ relationships with water might change in the future.
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The following commentary series focuses on water governance and management, examining water access and power relationships, development initiatives, water conservation and availability, water as commons and commodity, and emerging trends in sustainable water management.
John Wagner
Water Governance Today
Barbara Rose Johnston
Water, Culture and Power Negotiations at the UN
Antina von Schnitzler
Gauging Politics: Water, Commensuration and Citizenship in Post-Apartheid South Africa
Eleanor E Shoreman
Muddy Waters: Water Conservation and Environmental Ethics in the Mississippi Delta
Ashley Carse
Moral Economies of Water Management: Tensions in the Panama Canal Watershed
Jessica Cattelino
Citizenship and Nation in the Everglades
Carla Roncoli
Participatory Models and Exclusionary Frames in Water Management* More photos by Carla Roncoli related to this article are available on Flickr.
Kathryn Hicks, Nicole Fabricant and Carlos Revilla
The New Water Wars: Collective Action after Decentralization in El Alto, Bolivia
Nan Bress
The Water Spigot: Water Access, Safety and Perception Near the Ashokan Reservoir* More photos by Nan Bress related to this article are available on Flickr.
Simanti Dasgupta
Transactions in Transparency: Water, Market and Politics in the Indian Silicon Plateau
SOURCE: http://aaanet.org/publications/articles.cfm
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