Producing ethical water: Anti-mining activism and conflicts over municipal water provisioning in Cuenca, Ecuador

IF 0.7 2区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
Teresa A. Velásquez
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Abstract

When gold deposits were confirmed in a community watershed in 2005, water became a politically charged arena for anti-mining activism. This article follows the outcomes of a 2014 Ecuadorian water law on conflicts over water provisioning. Arguments about water's material properties and social qualities were deployed by government, municipal, and local actors in contests over who had legitimate authority to govern rural water systems. Claims about “clean” or “untreated” water—about water as a human right or as ethical solidarity—are invoked in disputes over whether drinking water should be managed by the municipality or the community. I argue that mining conflicts shape the way communities respond to the municipalization of their water supplies, leading to new forms of resource politics encapsulated in the term “ethical water.” The article illustrates the mutual constitution of conflicts over mining and water provisioning and how anti-extractive agendas are shaping Andean water governance.

Abstract Image

生产合乎道德的水:厄瓜多尔昆卡市反采矿活动和市政供水冲突
2005年,当金矿在一个社区的分水岭被确认时,水就成了反采矿激进主义的一个充满政治色彩的舞台。本文遵循2014年厄瓜多尔水法关于供水冲突的结果。关于水的物质属性和社会品质的争论被政府、市政和地方行动者用来争论谁拥有管理农村供水系统的合法权力。关于“干净”或“未经处理”的水的主张——关于水是一项人权还是一种道德团结——在关于饮用水应该由市政当局还是社区管理的争议中被引用。我认为,采矿冲突塑造了社区对供水市政化的反应方式,导致了一种新的资源政治形式,概括为“伦理水”。本文阐述了采矿和供水冲突的相互构成,以及反采掘议程如何影响安第斯山脉的水治理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
7.70%
发文量
61
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