This chapter uses a political ecology approach to examine how large dams and mega-hydraulic infrastructure in many parts of the world dispossess smallholder families and communities of their water and water rights, transforming and disintegrating territories environmentally and socially. It deploys the notion of ‘hydraulic property creation’ to look at the relationships among hydraulic infrastructure development and changing water rights frameworks. It contrasts mega-hydraulic projects that separate designer-builder and user worlds, and user-developed hydraulic systems. It presents important points of attention for more people- and nature-inclusive water governance and hydraulic intervention projects that build on social and environmental j...
We define and explore hydrosocial territories as spatial configurations of people, institutions, wat...
International audienceThis paper introduces the papers in this special issue and uses them as eviden...
We define and explore hydrosocial territories as spatial configurations of people, institutions, wat...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
A vast and growing body of scholarly studies has shown how large-scale hydraulic and hydro-manageria...
Water acquisition, storage, allocation and distribution are intensely contested in our society, whet...
We define and explore hydrosocial territories as spatial configurations of people, institutions, wat...
This paper introduces the papers in this special issue and uses them as evidence through which to ex...
Introduction A vast and growing body of scholarly studies has shown how large-scale hydraulic and hy...
Introduction A vast and growing body of scholarly studies has shown how large-scale hydraulic and hy...
This paper introduces the papers in this special issue and uses them as evidence through which to ex...
We define and explore hydrosocial territories as spatial configurations of people, institutions, wat...
We define and explore hydrosocial territories as spatial configurations of people, institutions, wat...
International audienceThis paper introduces the papers in this special issue and uses them as eviden...
We define and explore hydrosocial territories as spatial configurations of people, institutions, wat...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
A vast and growing body of scholarly studies has shown how large-scale hydraulic and hydro-manageria...
Water acquisition, storage, allocation and distribution are intensely contested in our society, whet...
We define and explore hydrosocial territories as spatial configurations of people, institutions, wat...
This paper introduces the papers in this special issue and uses them as evidence through which to ex...
Introduction A vast and growing body of scholarly studies has shown how large-scale hydraulic and hy...
Introduction A vast and growing body of scholarly studies has shown how large-scale hydraulic and hy...
This paper introduces the papers in this special issue and uses them as evidence through which to ex...
We define and explore hydrosocial territories as spatial configurations of people, institutions, wat...
We define and explore hydrosocial territories as spatial configurations of people, institutions, wat...
International audienceThis paper introduces the papers in this special issue and uses them as eviden...
We define and explore hydrosocial territories as spatial configurations of people, institutions, wat...