Abstract
AbstractUnderstanding the meaning of land–water entanglement is increasingly important today, in an age of climate change and desertification. Despite the close ties between water and land, literature largely focuses on each of them separately or ignores the attempts to disconnect them. This paper examines the connections and disconnections between water and land in the southern desert of Israel in the shadow of political use and environmental disaster. Drawing on ethnographic research, the paper explores the challenges and successes of intensive agriculture in arid regions, and how water allocation plays a crucial role in making the desert bloom. Weaving between the theoretical framework of 'agricultural infrastructure' and 'water-land imaginations', the paper separates between the different imaginations that enable the various dimensions of the water-land entanglement, the efforts made to expand the connection or disconnect them, and between their political, environmental and cultural realization as infrastructures. Overall, this paper provides insights into the ways by which Imaginations, infrastructures and land–water entanglement shape human-environmental interactions in arid regions and agriculture projects in the Anthropocene era.
Funder
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference81 articles.
1. Abu-Rabia, Safa. 2008. Between memory and resistance, an identity shaped by space: the case of the Naqab Arab Bedouins. Hagar 8 (2): 93–119.
2. Alatout, Samer. 2006. Towards a bio-territorial conception of power: territory, population, and environmental narratives in Palestine and Israel. Political Geography 25 (6): 601–621.
3. Alatout, Samer. 2009. Bringing abundance into environmental politics: constructing a Zionist network of water abundance, immigration, and colonization. Social Studies of Science 39 (3): 363–394.
4. Bailey, Clinton. 2006. Relations between Bedouin tribes on opposite sides of the Wadi Arabah, 1600–1950. In Crossing the Rift: Resources, Routes, Settlement Patterns and Interaction in the Wadi Arabah, ed. Piotr Bienkowski and Katherina Galor, 251–258. Oxford: The Council for British Research in the Levant Oxbow Books.
5. Barnes, Jessica. 2017. States of maintenance: power, politics, and Egypt’s irrigation infrastructure. Environment and Planning d: Society and Space 35 (1): 146–164.