The article is based on research on the lack of access to official water services in the informal settlements of the city of Antofagasta, Chile. The work aims to respond 1) what alternative practices to access water are used by the population of these settlements, and 2) to what extent these practices help them to claim access to formal water services. Combining concepts from urban political ecology and citizenship studies and based on qualitative information from intensive field work carried out in Antofagasta in 2018, the article discusses the emergence of alternative arrangements to access water by the settlements’ population and its relationship with the search for recognition of their basic rights to essential services and urban citize...
Frente al inminente proceso de cambio en las condiciones climáticas y la escasez de recursos hídrico...
The challenges of water governance in Chile today lie at the confluence of growing water demands, in...
Since the 1990s, international water sector reforms have centred heavily on economic and market appr...
This article examines the social representations of water in urban cultures of Argentina...
After three decades of neoliberal policies, there are growing concerns in Chile about how nature is ...
Theoretical debates about water law have long been characterised by a tension between notions of wat...
Local-level participatory communication practices have enabled the opening of new democratic spaces ...
This paper aim analyze a critical way the citizen participation level that exists in Chilean water l...
This publication belongs to the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network Working Papers Series (http://waterlat.org/...
This publication belongs to Volume 6, No 2, of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network Working Papers Series (h...
In this issue we feature five articles focused on experiences from Bolivia, Chile, France, and Spain...
International audienceThis article aims to analyze the plurality of water conflicts existing at the ...
This work examines the issue of the supply of potable water in the border cities of northern Tamauli...
This issue is a product of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network’s Thematic Area (TA) 3, the Urban Water Cycl...
The Chilean Water Code of 1981 has been presented as a successful case of free-market water reforms....
Frente al inminente proceso de cambio en las condiciones climáticas y la escasez de recursos hídrico...
The challenges of water governance in Chile today lie at the confluence of growing water demands, in...
Since the 1990s, international water sector reforms have centred heavily on economic and market appr...
This article examines the social representations of water in urban cultures of Argentina...
After three decades of neoliberal policies, there are growing concerns in Chile about how nature is ...
Theoretical debates about water law have long been characterised by a tension between notions of wat...
Local-level participatory communication practices have enabled the opening of new democratic spaces ...
This paper aim analyze a critical way the citizen participation level that exists in Chilean water l...
This publication belongs to the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network Working Papers Series (http://waterlat.org/...
This publication belongs to Volume 6, No 2, of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network Working Papers Series (h...
In this issue we feature five articles focused on experiences from Bolivia, Chile, France, and Spain...
International audienceThis article aims to analyze the plurality of water conflicts existing at the ...
This work examines the issue of the supply of potable water in the border cities of northern Tamauli...
This issue is a product of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network’s Thematic Area (TA) 3, the Urban Water Cycl...
The Chilean Water Code of 1981 has been presented as a successful case of free-market water reforms....
Frente al inminente proceso de cambio en las condiciones climáticas y la escasez de recursos hídrico...
The challenges of water governance in Chile today lie at the confluence of growing water demands, in...
Since the 1990s, international water sector reforms have centred heavily on economic and market appr...