Reform and Regression: Discourses of Water Reallocation in Mpumalanga, South Africa

被引:0
|
作者
Peters, Rebecca [1 ]
Woodhouse, Philip [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Sch Geog & Environm, Oxford, England
[2] Univ Manchester, Global Dev Inst, Sch Environm Educ & Dev, Manchester, Lancs, England
关键词
Water reform; South Africa; cultural political economy; discourse; water re-allocation; CATCHMENT; RIGHTS; LAND; POLITICS; STRUGGLE; LIMITS;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
This paper traces the implementation of reforms in water resource management in the Inkomati catchment, South Africa, since the National Water Act of 1998. It focuses on the ways that the predominant water users - white commercial farmers - have negotiated competing demands for water, particularly from black farmers and from growing urban water supply systems. The paper argues that existing commercial agricultural interests have largely succeeded in maintaining their access to water. We investigate this outcome using a cultural political economy perspective which focuses on an analysis of discourses of water allocation and explores how different discourses are reinforced by social practice and through their adoption by, and diffusion through, institutions of water governance. The research has identified three principle narratives that underpin discourse: scarcity, participation, and rights. It focuses on the ways in which calculative techniques for quantifying water use and economic value have been used to reinforce discourses rooted in narratives of water scarcity, and how these narratives ultimately structure water reallocation by agencies of water governance. The paper also identifies the wider political and economic dynamics at play, and the processes that may shift the current discourse of water reallocation.
引用
收藏
页码:853 / 868
页数:16
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