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Water politics and management: findings from Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin America (articles in English, Portuguese, and Spanish)

Lookup NU author(s): Emeritus Professor Esteban CastroORCiD, Ross Beveridge, Dr Emmanuel Akpabio

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).


Abstract

This issue of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network Working Papers includes six contributions. The first article, by Mark Drakeford, presents a historical analysis of the changing arrangements for the provision of essential water and sanitation services in Wales. The second article, by Ross Beveridge, discusses the troubled process that characterized the privatization of Berlin’s Water Company (BWB) in 1999, in the aftermath of the reunification of Germany. In the third article, Emmanuel Akpabio, Eti-ido Udofia, and Kaoru Takara discuss some aspects of the interrelations between people and water in the context of sub-Saharan Africa. The fourth article, by Melina Tobias, Damiano Tagliavini, and Melisa Orta, addresses the current global wave of re-publicization of formerly privatized water and sanitation companies, looking at the experiences of Buenos Aires and Santa Fe in Argentina. In the fifth article, Luisa Arango and Jorge Rowlands provide and introduction to meta-studies of water-related research carried out by French and British anthropologists. They include a translation of work previously published in French by Barbara Casciarri and Mauro Van Aken. The sixth and final article, by Ladislau Dowbor and Arlindo Esteves Rodrigues, focuses on the contradictions characterizing the conceptualization of water by different social actors, in particular the contradictions between market-driven notions of water as a commodity and civil-society understandings of water as a common good. The six articles composing this edition, from authors based in Asia, Africa, Europe, and Latin America, provide important contributions to current debates about the politics of essential water-related services. They also offer important insights about new avenues for research on water issues, aiming to enhance our knowledge of both empirical experiences and academic traditions that often remain isolated from each other whether because of geographical, national or cultural obstacles and distances.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Castro JE, Drakeford M, Beverdige R, Akpabio EM, Udofia ES, Takara K, Tobias M, Tagliavini D, Orta M, Casciarri B, vanAken M, Arango L, Rowlands J, Dowbor L, Rodrigues AME

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network Working Papers

Year: 2017

Volume: 4

Issue: 2

Pages: 1-159

Online publication date: 15/09/2017

Acceptance date: 01/09/2017

Date deposited: 19/09/2017

ISSN (print): 2056-4856

ISSN (electronic): 2056-4864

Publisher: WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network

URL: http://waterlat.org/publications/working-papers-series/vol4no2/

DOI: 10.5072/zenodo.127681


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