Imperilled Waterscapes

This paper examines the historical waterscapes of Bengaluru, now imperilled by development. Earlier a garden city, the agrarian landscape of Bengaluru was formerly supplied with water from an interconnected lake system. This system has since been fragmented due to urbanization and changes in land c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Amrita Sen, Hita Unnikrishnan, Harini Nagendra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nandan Nawn 2020-07-01
Series:Ecology, Economy and Society – The INSEE Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ecoinsee.org/journal/ojs/index.php/ees/article/view/229
id doaj-c052fbc128a94c528ea97b4202007d6b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c052fbc128a94c528ea97b4202007d6b2021-04-02T21:30:20ZengNandan NawnEcology, Economy and Society – The INSEE Journal2581-61522581-61012020-07-013210.37773/ees.v3i2.229Imperilled WaterscapesAmrita Sen0Hita Unnikrishnan1Harini Nagendra2Indian Institute of Technology KharagpurThe University of SheffieldAzim Premji University This paper examines the historical waterscapes of Bengaluru, now imperilled by development. Earlier a garden city, the agrarian landscape of Bengaluru was formerly supplied with water from an interconnected lake system. This system has since been fragmented due to urbanization and changes in land cover, impacting local institutions and livelihoods dependent on the lakes. In this paper, we use the case of the city’s largest lake, Bellandur, to demonstrate the transformation of the waterscape from an open semi-arid landscape pre-dating the city into an agrarian water-dependent landscape characterized by flows of water in pre-colonial and colonial Bengaluru, and finally into a concretized landscape and the individualization of lakes in the “modern” city. Claims to and associations with the lake ecosystem have altered through changing hydrological, institutional, and social relations, leading to shifts in imaginations of the lake as well. https://ecoinsee.org/journal/ojs/index.php/ees/article/view/229waterscapeslakesurbanizationBellandurBengaluru
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amrita Sen
Hita Unnikrishnan
Harini Nagendra
spellingShingle Amrita Sen
Hita Unnikrishnan
Harini Nagendra
Imperilled Waterscapes
Ecology, Economy and Society – The INSEE Journal
waterscapes
lakes
urbanization
Bellandur
Bengaluru
author_facet Amrita Sen
Hita Unnikrishnan
Harini Nagendra
author_sort Amrita Sen
title Imperilled Waterscapes
title_short Imperilled Waterscapes
title_full Imperilled Waterscapes
title_fullStr Imperilled Waterscapes
title_full_unstemmed Imperilled Waterscapes
title_sort imperilled waterscapes
publisher Nandan Nawn
series Ecology, Economy and Society – The INSEE Journal
issn 2581-6152
2581-6101
publishDate 2020-07-01
description This paper examines the historical waterscapes of Bengaluru, now imperilled by development. Earlier a garden city, the agrarian landscape of Bengaluru was formerly supplied with water from an interconnected lake system. This system has since been fragmented due to urbanization and changes in land cover, impacting local institutions and livelihoods dependent on the lakes. In this paper, we use the case of the city’s largest lake, Bellandur, to demonstrate the transformation of the waterscape from an open semi-arid landscape pre-dating the city into an agrarian water-dependent landscape characterized by flows of water in pre-colonial and colonial Bengaluru, and finally into a concretized landscape and the individualization of lakes in the “modern” city. Claims to and associations with the lake ecosystem have altered through changing hydrological, institutional, and social relations, leading to shifts in imaginations of the lake as well.
topic waterscapes
lakes
urbanization
Bellandur
Bengaluru
url https://ecoinsee.org/journal/ojs/index.php/ees/article/view/229
work_keys_str_mv AT amritasen imperilledwaterscapes
AT hitaunnikrishnan imperilledwaterscapes
AT harininagendra imperilledwaterscapes
_version_ 1721545317722095616