Aiming to advance our understanding of the transformative potential of remunicipalisation, this paper looks at the uncertain and unequal struggle for water remunicipalisation in Jakarta over the last twenty years and offers an ontological account of the discourse on the human right to water as a catalyst for progressive policy change. A first, formal definition of transformative remunicipalisation is herein offered. This is defined as an ideal-type of water remunicipalisation whose institutional legitimacy rests on the moral advocacy of emancipatory insurgency, and whose implementation offers concrete possibilities of progress towards emancipatory objectives. As regards moral advocacy and collective action, the hybridisation of emancipatory...
Since the human right to water began to receive institutional recognition and interpretation at both...
In this commentary we draw attention to water sharing as political, highlighting the stakes and conc...
Contemporary socio-economic transformations in South Asia are creating increasingly serious water pr...
Resistance to neoliberal legal reforms has increased globally in recent decades due to the failure o...
This thesis critically examines the mainstream discourse on the human right to water and suggests th...
Cities, regions and countries worldwide are increasingly choosing to close the book on water privati...
This chapter considers whether remunicipalisation – the return of water services to public ownership...
This book provides a comprehensive catalogue of water remunicipalisation cases. Water remunicipalisa...
Since 1997, water privatization has existed but there is no significant progress on water management...
Unsustainable groundwater extraction in Jakarta has resulted in the subsidence of its land. Said eff...
<p>Introduction Policy discourses - at the heart of water governance - are seldom explicit about the...
The scholarship on the right to water has proliferated in interesting and unexpected ways. Through h...
The challenge of water provision in third world cities is to maintain the supply in the context of ...
The explicit recognition of the human right to water is a relatively recent development and the deli...
This paper examines the debate in the wake of the 2007 flood in Jakarta, the biggest one to occur in...
Since the human right to water began to receive institutional recognition and interpretation at both...
In this commentary we draw attention to water sharing as political, highlighting the stakes and conc...
Contemporary socio-economic transformations in South Asia are creating increasingly serious water pr...
Resistance to neoliberal legal reforms has increased globally in recent decades due to the failure o...
This thesis critically examines the mainstream discourse on the human right to water and suggests th...
Cities, regions and countries worldwide are increasingly choosing to close the book on water privati...
This chapter considers whether remunicipalisation – the return of water services to public ownership...
This book provides a comprehensive catalogue of water remunicipalisation cases. Water remunicipalisa...
Since 1997, water privatization has existed but there is no significant progress on water management...
Unsustainable groundwater extraction in Jakarta has resulted in the subsidence of its land. Said eff...
<p>Introduction Policy discourses - at the heart of water governance - are seldom explicit about the...
The scholarship on the right to water has proliferated in interesting and unexpected ways. Through h...
The challenge of water provision in third world cities is to maintain the supply in the context of ...
The explicit recognition of the human right to water is a relatively recent development and the deli...
This paper examines the debate in the wake of the 2007 flood in Jakarta, the biggest one to occur in...
Since the human right to water began to receive institutional recognition and interpretation at both...
In this commentary we draw attention to water sharing as political, highlighting the stakes and conc...
Contemporary socio-economic transformations in South Asia are creating increasingly serious water pr...