New book: The Right to Water: Politics, Governance and Social Struggles
“The Right to Water: Politics, Governance and Social
Struggles”
Edited by Farhana Sultana and Alex
Loftus
Earthscan (Taylor and Francis), UK, 2011
http://www.taylorandfrancis.com/books/details/9781849713597/
Description:
The right to clean water has been
adopted by the United Nations as a basic human right. Yet how such universal
calls for a right to water are understood, negotiated, experienced and struggled
over remain key challenges. The Right to Water elucidates how universal calls
for rights articulate with local historical geographical contexts, governance,
politics and social struggles, thereby highlighting the challenges and the
possibilities that exist. Bringing together a unique range of academics,
policy-makers and activists, the book analyzes how struggles for the right to
water have attempted to translate moral arguments over access to safe water into
workable claims. This book is an intervention at a crucial moment into the shape
and future direction of struggles for the right to water in a range of
political, geographic and socio-economics contexts, seeking to be pro-active in
defining what this struggle could mean and how it might be taken forward in a
far broader transformative politics.
The Right to Water engages with a range
of approaches that focus on philosophical, legal and governance perspectives
before seeking to apply these more abstract arguments to an array of concrete
struggles and case studies. In so doing, the book builds on empirical examples
from Africa, Asia, Oceania, Latin America, the Middle East, North America and
the European Union.
Table of Contents:
Foreword - Maude Barlow
1.
The Right to Water: Possibilities and Prospects Farhana Sultana and Alex
Loftus
2. The ‘Commons’ Versus the ‘Commodity’: Alter -globalization,
Anti-privatization and the Human Right to Water in the Global South - Karen
Bakker
3. The Human Right to What? Water, Rights, Humans and the Relation of
Things Jamie Linton
4. A Right to Water? Geographico-legal Perspectives -
Chad Staddon, Tom Appleby and Evadne Grant
5. The Political Economy of the
Right to Water: Reinvigorating the Question of Property - Kyle Mitchell
6.
Scarce or insecure? The Right to Water and the Ethics of Global Water Governance
- Jeremy Schmidt
7. The Right to Water as the Right to Identity: Legal
Struggles of Indigenous Peoples of Aotearoa New Zealand - Jacinta Ruru
8.
Legal Protection of the Right to Water in the European Union - Marleen van
Rijswick and Andrea Keessen
9. Rights, Citizenship and Territory: Water
Politics in the West Bank - Iliaria Giglioli
10. Water Rights and Wrongs:
Illegality and Informal Use in Mexico and the U.S. - Katharine Meehan
11. The
Centrality of Community Participation to the Realization of the Right to Water:
The Illustrative Case of South Africa - Cristy Clark
12. The Right to the
City and the Eco-Social Commoning of Water: Discursive and Political Lessons
from South Africa - Patrick Bond
13. Anti-Privatization Struggles and the
Right to Water in India: Engendering Cultures of Opposition - Krista
Bywater
14. Seeing through the Concept of Water as a Human Right in Bolivia -
Rocio Bustamante, Carlos Crespo and Anna Maria Walnycki
15. From Cochabamba
to Colombia: Travelling Repertoires in Latin American Water Struggles - Verónica
Perera
Reviews:
"The Right to Water: Politics, Governance
and Social Struggles is a brilliant collection of essays from the best thinkers,
academics and activists in the field, and is required reading for all those
wanting this mighty effort to succeed." - Maude Barlow, Chairperson of the
Council of Canadians, former Senior Advisor on Water to the 63rd President of
the UN General Assembly, and recipient of the 2005 Right Livelihood
Award.
"The right to safe and sufficient drinking water for all is one of
the main issues and struggles of our time. Unequal power relations at local,
national and transnational scales, combined with policies and intervention
practices that are often highly adverse for the vulnerable, make that those with
water abundance tend to squander leaving the others to face ever greater
injustice. This book’s diverse chapters provide an empirically rich and
intellectually elaborate insight in the world of water, power, governance, and
social mobilization" - Rutgerd Boelens, Coordinator Justicia Hídrica/Water
Justice alliance; Associate Professor Wageningen University, The Netherlands;
Visiting Professor Catholic University Peru.
"This edited collection by
Sultana and Loftus comes at the right time, when the global financial collapse
threatens to worsen the conditions of water injustice affecting millions in the
planet. The book is an excellent contribution to international debates about the
conceptual and practical intricacies of "the human right to water". It should be
read by scholars, students, practitioners and all those concerned with the
eradication of structural water inequality and injustice" - José Esteban Castro,
Professor of Sociology, School of Geography, Politics and Sociology, Newcastle
University
"The right to water for all has been invoked many times over
the past decade or so. Yet, very little has been achieved to achieve a more
equitable access to water despite resounding declarations of assorted national
and international public and private organizations. This book is a long overdue
engagement with the enduring relevance of the right to water and why it is
denied to so many people in the world. The contributors consider the centrality
of social and political struggle in claiming this right to water. For those who
have enough of empty slogans, impotent declarations and superficial analysis,
this book opens up new theoretical perspectives and politically empowering
insights that chart pathways for achieving real change." - Erik Swyngedouw,
Professor of Geography, University of Manchester
Contact information |
Farhana Sultana, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Geography Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 144 Eggers Hall, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, 13244, USA
(email: farhanasc@gmail.com ; sultanaf@syr.edu) |
---|---|
News type | Inbrief |
File link |
http://www.taylorandfrancis.com/books/details/9781849713597/ |
Source of information | Farhana Sultana, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Geography Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs 144 Eggers Hall, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, 13244, USA |
Keyword(s) | right to water, water governance, social water, human right, injustice |
Subject(s) | POLICY-WATER POLICY AND WATER MANAGEMENT , RIGHT |
Relation | http://www.emwis.net/topics/WaterRight |
Geographical coverage | United States, |
News date | 28/11/2011 |
Working language(s) | ENGLISH |