'Mafias' in the Waterscape: Urban Informality and Everyday Public Authority in Bangalore

This article investigates the phenomenon of Bangaloreʼs urban 'water mafias', operators who extract and deliver groundwater to scores of informal residential areas in Indian cities. The term 'mafia' here is treated as a semantic area of situated meanings and cultural interpretati...

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Main Author: Malini Ranganathan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Water Alternatives Association 2014-02-01
Series:Water Alternatives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol7/v7issue1/235-a7-1-6/file
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spelling doaj-96147c0a91174a24bcdc96e112a668442020-11-24T20:57:48ZengWater Alternatives AssociationWater Alternatives1965-01751965-01752014-02-017189105'Mafias' in the Waterscape: Urban Informality and Everyday Public Authority in BangaloreMalini Ranganathan0Global Environmental Politics Program, School of International Service, American University, Washington, DC, USAThis article investigates the phenomenon of Bangaloreʼs urban 'water mafias', operators who extract and deliver groundwater to scores of informal residential areas in Indian cities. The term 'mafia' here is treated as a semantic area of situated meanings and cultural interpretations that needs to be historicised and prised open in order to better understand how the urban waterscape is produced and inhabited. It situates the provenance and workings of mafias within wider debates on urban informality, state formation, and urban infrastructure and space. Rather than seeing mafias as filling a gap where government water supply has failed, as mainstream narratives suggest, the paper argues that mafias must be seen as formative of the post-colonial state. It further suggests that the specific form of public authority exercised by water mafias explains the production of informality in Bangaloreʼs waterscape. Based on ethnographic research in 2007-2009, the paper characterises the everyday authority wielded by mafias along three main registers: (i) the ability of mafias to make and break discursive and material boundaries between the formal and informal, public and private, and state and society, (ii) the varied nature of mafiasʼ political practices, ranging from exploitation to electoral lobbying to social protection to the provision of welfare, and iii) mafiasʼ complicity in both water and land regimes in a neo-liberalised urban political economy.http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol7/v7issue1/235-a7-1-6/filePost-colonial citiesinformal sovereignsstate formationmunicipal water politicsurban peripheryIndia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Malini Ranganathan
spellingShingle Malini Ranganathan
'Mafias' in the Waterscape: Urban Informality and Everyday Public Authority in Bangalore
Water Alternatives
Post-colonial cities
informal sovereigns
state formation
municipal water politics
urban periphery
India
author_facet Malini Ranganathan
author_sort Malini Ranganathan
title 'Mafias' in the Waterscape: Urban Informality and Everyday Public Authority in Bangalore
title_short 'Mafias' in the Waterscape: Urban Informality and Everyday Public Authority in Bangalore
title_full 'Mafias' in the Waterscape: Urban Informality and Everyday Public Authority in Bangalore
title_fullStr 'Mafias' in the Waterscape: Urban Informality and Everyday Public Authority in Bangalore
title_full_unstemmed 'Mafias' in the Waterscape: Urban Informality and Everyday Public Authority in Bangalore
title_sort 'mafias' in the waterscape: urban informality and everyday public authority in bangalore
publisher Water Alternatives Association
series Water Alternatives
issn 1965-0175
1965-0175
publishDate 2014-02-01
description This article investigates the phenomenon of Bangaloreʼs urban 'water mafias', operators who extract and deliver groundwater to scores of informal residential areas in Indian cities. The term 'mafia' here is treated as a semantic area of situated meanings and cultural interpretations that needs to be historicised and prised open in order to better understand how the urban waterscape is produced and inhabited. It situates the provenance and workings of mafias within wider debates on urban informality, state formation, and urban infrastructure and space. Rather than seeing mafias as filling a gap where government water supply has failed, as mainstream narratives suggest, the paper argues that mafias must be seen as formative of the post-colonial state. It further suggests that the specific form of public authority exercised by water mafias explains the production of informality in Bangaloreʼs waterscape. Based on ethnographic research in 2007-2009, the paper characterises the everyday authority wielded by mafias along three main registers: (i) the ability of mafias to make and break discursive and material boundaries between the formal and informal, public and private, and state and society, (ii) the varied nature of mafiasʼ political practices, ranging from exploitation to electoral lobbying to social protection to the provision of welfare, and iii) mafiasʼ complicity in both water and land regimes in a neo-liberalised urban political economy.
topic Post-colonial cities
informal sovereigns
state formation
municipal water politics
urban periphery
India
url http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol7/v7issue1/235-a7-1-6/file
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