Old wine in new bottles: The adaptive capacity of the hydraulic mission in Ecuador
Despite a widely embraced ecological turn and strident critique of megastructures in the 1990s, construction of large infrastructure has been reignited worldwide. While Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) and River Basin Management (RBM) have at least discursively held sway as the dominan...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Water Alternatives Association
2017-06-01
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Series: | Water Alternatives |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol10/v10issue2/358-a10-2-8/file |
Summary: | Despite a widely embraced ecological turn and strident critique of megastructures in the 1990s,
construction of large infrastructure has been reignited worldwide. While Integrated Water Resources
Management (IWRM) and River Basin Management (RBM) have at least discursively held sway as the dominant
paradigm in water management since the late 1990s, we argue that the 'hydraulic mission' never really went away
and has in some places energetically re-emerged. The development discourse that justified many dams in the past
is now supplemented by a new set of appealing justifiers. With the help of the case of Ecuador we show that the
hegemonic project of the hydraulic mission has a great discursive adaptive capacity and a new set of allies. The
rise of the BRICS (especially China), South-South cooperation and private investors provides non-traditional
sources of funding, making the construction of hydraulic infrastructure less dependent on Western
conditionalities. The resulting governance picture highlights the disconnect between the still widely embraced
policy discourse of IWRM/RBM and the drivers and practices of the hydraulic mission; questioning what value
international calls for 'good water governance' have in the midst of new discourses, broader transnational political
projects and the powerful dam-building alliances that underlie them. |
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ISSN: | 1965-0175 1965-0175 |