JSTOR

Governing Water in India

Author

Fernandes, Leela

Year

2022

Publisher

University of Washington Press

Type

BOOK

Category

History

Language

English

Pages

300

ISBN

978-0-29575-044-6

Link

Last Update

09-Sep-2024

Keywords

HISTORY / Asia / India & South Asia;POLITICAL SCIENCE / General;NATURE / Environmental Conservation & Protection;TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Environmental / Water Supply

Description

The challenges of managing resource use in the world's largest democracy Intensifying droughts and competing pressures on water resources foreground water scarcity as an urgent concern of the global climate change crisis. In India, individual, industrial, and agricultural water demands exacerbate inequities of access and expose the failures of state governance to regulate use. State policies and institutions influenced by global models of reform produce and magnify socio-economic injustice in this "water bureaucracy." Drawing on historical records, an analysis of post-liberalization developments, and fieldwork in the city of Chennai, Leela Fernandes traces the configuration of colonial historical legacies, developmental-state policies, and economic reforms that strain water resources and intensify inequality. While reforms of water governance promote privatization and decentralization, they strengthen the state centralized control over water through city-based development models. Understanding the political economy of water thus illuminates the consequent failures of the state within countries of the Global South.

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