Publication Type:
Journal Article
Source:
Bulletin of Latin American Research, Volume 24, Number 3, p.311-327 (2005)
Keywords:
irritation,
politics
Abstract:
This article uses two case studies to illustrate how Andean irrigation
development and management emerges from a hybrid mix of local
community rules and the changing political forms and ideological forces
of hegemonic states. Some indigenous water-control institutions are
with us today because they were consonant with the extractive purposes
of local elites and Inca, Spanish and post-independence Republican
states. These states often appropriated and standardised local watermanagement
rules, rights and rituals in order to gain control over the
surplus produced by these irrigation systems. However, as we show in
the case of two communities in Ecuador and Peru, many of these same
institutions are reappropriated and redirected by local communities to
counteract both classic ‘exclusion-oriented’ and modern ‘inclusionoriented’
water and identity politics. In this way, they resist subordination,
discrimination and the control of local water management by rural
elites or state actors.
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