Beyond state politics in Asia's transboundary rivers: Revisiting two decades of critical hydropolitics

Author:

Rogers Sarah1ORCID,Fung Zali2,Lamb Vanessa3ORCID,Gamble Ruth4,Wilmsen Brooke5,Wu Fengshi6,Han Xiao7

Affiliation:

1. Asia Institute University of Melbourne Victoria Parkville Australia

2. School of Geography Earth and Atmospheric Sciences University of Melbourne Victoria Parkville Australia

3. Department of Social Science York University Ontario Toronto Canada

4. Department of Archaeology and History La Trobe University Victoria Bundoora Australia

5. School of Humanities and Social Sciences La Trobe University Victoria Bundoora Australia

6. School of Social Sciences University of New South Wales New South Wales Kensington Australia

7. School of Public Administration Hohai University Nanjing China

Abstract

AbstractFor the past two decades, work across a range of fields, but particularly geography, has engaged ‘critical hydropolitics’ as a way to highlight not only the politics inherent in decisions about water, but also the foundational assumptions of more conventional hydropolitical analyses that tend to focus on conflicts and cooperation over water resources, with a heavy emphasis on ‘the state’ as the key actor and scale of analysis. In this article we review critical hydropolitical literature that focuses on transboundary rivers that descend from the eastern Tibetan Plateau, namely the Lancang‐Mekong, Yarlung Tsangpo‐Brahmaputra and Nu‐Salween river basins. We highlight five key and interrelated themes that have emerged in the literature to date ‐ the state, scale, infrastructure, knowledge and logics, and climate change ‐ and discuss how these provide useful tools for more fine‐grained analyses of power, control and contestation.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Computers in Earth Sciences,Earth-Surface Processes,General Social Sciences,Water Science and Technology

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