In most Latin American countries, issues concerning water governance and control also reflect broader conflicts over authority and legitimacy between the state and civil society. What lies behind the diverse water policy reforms is not simply a question of governing water affairs but also a drive to control or co-opt water user groups. This paper examines the efforts by the present Ecuadorian government to ‘control water users’ through new forms of ‘governmentality’ (Foucault, 1991). We use the ‘cathedral and bazaar’ metaphor (Lankford and Hepworth, 2010) to illustrate government rationale and practices in water governance shifts in the last decades. We analyze how Rafael Correa’s government sets out to reshape the relations between state, ...
Based on the concept of «law discourse content» developed by Óscar Correas, this article examines th...
Based on the concept of «law discourse content» developed by Óscar Correas, this article examines th...
This article traces a policy shift that makes the ‘water user’ the main subject of water governance....
In most Latin American countries, issues concerning water governance and control also reflect broade...
In most Latin American countries, issues concerning water governance and control also reflect broade...
In Ecuador neo-liberal reforms in the 1990s transformed the water and irrigation sector at different...
This article critically investigates recent water governance shifts, particularly constitutional cha...
Participation of water users in Ecuadorian water governance has increased in the last two decades th...
Participation of water users in Ecuadorian water governance has increased in the last two decades th...
Making water management more democratic through the participation of water users, while crucially in...
© 2016 International Water Resources Association. Ecuadorian state policies and institutional reform...
Ecuadorian state policies and institutional reforms have territorialized water since the 1960s. Peas...
NGOs have taken up an increasing number of roles and responsibilities in Latin American societies. B...
NGOs have taken up an increasing number of roles and responsibilities in Latin American societies. B...
NGOs have taken up an increasing number of roles and responsibilities in Latin American societies. B...
Based on the concept of «law discourse content» developed by Óscar Correas, this article examines th...
Based on the concept of «law discourse content» developed by Óscar Correas, this article examines th...
This article traces a policy shift that makes the ‘water user’ the main subject of water governance....
In most Latin American countries, issues concerning water governance and control also reflect broade...
In most Latin American countries, issues concerning water governance and control also reflect broade...
In Ecuador neo-liberal reforms in the 1990s transformed the water and irrigation sector at different...
This article critically investigates recent water governance shifts, particularly constitutional cha...
Participation of water users in Ecuadorian water governance has increased in the last two decades th...
Participation of water users in Ecuadorian water governance has increased in the last two decades th...
Making water management more democratic through the participation of water users, while crucially in...
© 2016 International Water Resources Association. Ecuadorian state policies and institutional reform...
Ecuadorian state policies and institutional reforms have territorialized water since the 1960s. Peas...
NGOs have taken up an increasing number of roles and responsibilities in Latin American societies. B...
NGOs have taken up an increasing number of roles and responsibilities in Latin American societies. B...
NGOs have taken up an increasing number of roles and responsibilities in Latin American societies. B...
Based on the concept of «law discourse content» developed by Óscar Correas, this article examines th...
Based on the concept of «law discourse content» developed by Óscar Correas, this article examines th...
This article traces a policy shift that makes the ‘water user’ the main subject of water governance....