Affiliation:
1. Rap[id]: Solutions for Research and Education, The Netherlands
2. Human Geography, Sweden
3. G-EAU, France
4. Water Resources Management, WUR, The Netherlands
5. Kafr-el-Sheikh, Egypt
Abstract
This article investigates how people, technology, and water flows act together in using and transforming infrastructure to improve water access. Analytically, we propose to study collective action over time through the relationships between humans and non-humans as they collaborate to mediate water and other flows. Our case-study lies in Egypt. Over four decades, the Irrigation Improvement Project has introduced various sociotechnical and institutional measures to improve water management in the Nile Delta. By establishing collective pumping infrastructure and Water User Associations, water users were compelled to collaborate to reduce water extraction and over-irrigation. For heuristic purposes, we examine in detail the life history of one pumping collective facing increasing water scarcity. The article presents four life phases of the pumping collective and analyses what drives the assemblage and its transformations. Through time, we understand pumping collectives as heterogeneous and shifting assemblages of human and non-human agents that provide differentiated access to multiple resource flows. We describe the surprising stream of events that unfolds. The pumping collective radically dismantles the standard technological and organizational set-up and replaces it with a more flexible and disaggregated form of irrigation. By tracking this trajectory, the article demonstrates the remarkable agency of a pumping collective in renewing and reassembling itself. On this basis, we argue that the complex entanglement of material objects, human actors, water (and other resource flows) can explain this. Hence, it is important to look beyond the society-nature dichotomy to understand the transformational capacity of collectives.
Funder
Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science
Reference61 articles.
1. Pumping possibility: Agricultural expansion through desert reclamation in Egypt
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3. Bolding A (2008). In hot water: A study on the sociotechnical intervention models and practices of water use in smallholder agriculture, Nyanyadzi catchment, Zimbabwe. PhD Thesis, Wageningen University, The Netherlands.
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