1,416 research outputs found
Imaginaries of place in territorialization processes:Transforming the Oyacachi<i> pĂĄramos</i>Â through nature conservation and water transfers in the Ecuadorian highlands
How Ecuadorian pĂĄramos are perceived has drastically changed over the last five decades. From cold, hostile, and unproductive hinterlands, pĂĄramos have changed to become areas for biodiversity conservation and âwater towersâ that ought to be protected to provide clean and abundant water for cities and irrigation. To understand how these changing perceptions of pĂĄramos relate to interventions and their on-the-ground negotiation by local communities, we develop the notion of imaginaries of place and explore its relations to notions of governmentality and territorialization. We show how, based on changing imaginaries of what pĂĄramos are, state and non-state interventions have tried to control the Oyacachi pĂĄramos in the Northern Ecuadorian Highlands for the specific purpose of nature and water conservation. At the same time, we show that these interventions are highly contested on-the-ground. This leads to confrontations, negotiations, and a re-definition of the imaginaries of place there exist. Our analysis expounds the relevance of understanding imaginaries of place and its close relations to interventions and their negotiation
Water justice and Europeâs Right2Water movement
In 2013 the European Citizensâ Initiative (ECI) âRight2Waterâ collected 1.9 million signatures across Europe against water privatization. It became the first ever successful ECI and has built a Europe-wide movement. Right2Water sought for Europeâs legal enforcement of the Human Right to Water and Sanitation (HRWS) as a strategic political tool to challenge European Union market policies. The paper examines the ECI from a social movement perspective. Although the European Commission subscribed that âwater is a public good, not a commodityâ, its implementation is subject to continuing politics and socio-political struggle, with growing urgency in times of the Covid-19 pandemic crisis
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