This is the second issue developed by members of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network’s Thematic Area 10, Water and Violence. Research done by members of this TA focuses on how violence, whether systemic-structural, subjective, symbolic, or in any other of its many forms, has become the key mechanism through which the relations between human beings, and between humans and Nature, are de-structured and reconfigured, and new kinds of relations are created, producing new forms of territorial, social and political power and domination. TA10 aims to explore, examine, and contribute to a better understanding of the often-traumatic experiences emerging from these processes of social reordering, whose consequences of socio-ecological dispossession can be o...
In Mexico, over the last decades, water-related conflicts have become more frequent and have led to ...
This issue is a product of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network’s Thematic Area (TA) 3, the Urban Water Cycl...
Domino-Centric Perspectives on Water Justice. This chapter takes as its starting point the call from...
In Guatemala, the exploitation of water for social purposes is marked by processes of economic devel...
This dossier has been published as Volume 4, Number 4 of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Working Papers (http:/...
This article presents preliminary advances of the research project “Water inequalities. Territories ...
In this chapter I analyze the socio-environmental conflicts generated by the mobilization in defense...
Article 2 of Vol. 7, No 1, Water politics, violence, and injustice: experiences from Brazil, Guatema...
Article 1 of Vol. 7, No 1, Water politics, violence, and injustice: experiences from Brazil, Guatema...
Water-related disasters have become more unpredictable amidst human-induced climatic and hydroecolog...
This publication belongs to the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network Working Papers Series (http://waterlat.org/...
his issue of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network’s Working Papers is a product of the Network’s Thematic Ar...
This edited book presents eleven chapters addressing the politics of water in Latin America. It brin...
Vol 9 No2 of theWATERLAT-GOBACIT Network’s Working Papers. This issue of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Ne...
The current phase of capitalist development –dominated by transnational financial capital– has intro...
In Mexico, over the last decades, water-related conflicts have become more frequent and have led to ...
This issue is a product of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network’s Thematic Area (TA) 3, the Urban Water Cycl...
Domino-Centric Perspectives on Water Justice. This chapter takes as its starting point the call from...
In Guatemala, the exploitation of water for social purposes is marked by processes of economic devel...
This dossier has been published as Volume 4, Number 4 of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Working Papers (http:/...
This article presents preliminary advances of the research project “Water inequalities. Territories ...
In this chapter I analyze the socio-environmental conflicts generated by the mobilization in defense...
Article 2 of Vol. 7, No 1, Water politics, violence, and injustice: experiences from Brazil, Guatema...
Article 1 of Vol. 7, No 1, Water politics, violence, and injustice: experiences from Brazil, Guatema...
Water-related disasters have become more unpredictable amidst human-induced climatic and hydroecolog...
This publication belongs to the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network Working Papers Series (http://waterlat.org/...
his issue of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network’s Working Papers is a product of the Network’s Thematic Ar...
This edited book presents eleven chapters addressing the politics of water in Latin America. It brin...
Vol 9 No2 of theWATERLAT-GOBACIT Network’s Working Papers. This issue of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Ne...
The current phase of capitalist development –dominated by transnational financial capital– has intro...
In Mexico, over the last decades, water-related conflicts have become more frequent and have led to ...
This issue is a product of the WATERLAT-GOBACIT Network’s Thematic Area (TA) 3, the Urban Water Cycl...
Domino-Centric Perspectives on Water Justice. This chapter takes as its starting point the call from...