All dried up: The materiality of drought in Ladismith, South Africa

Author:

Savelli Elisa1ORCID,Rusca Maria2,Cloke Hannah3,Flügel Tyrel J4,Karriem Abdulrazak5,Di Baldassarre Giuliano67

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth Sciences, Air, Water and Landscape Science, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden Centre of Natural Hazards and Disaster Science, CNDS, Uppsala, Sweden

2. Global Development Institute, University of Manchester, UK

3. Department of Earth Sciences, Air, Water and Landscape Science, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden Centre of Natural Hazards and Disaster Science, CNDS, Uppsala, Sweden Department of Meteorology, University of Reading, Reading, UK Department of Geography and Environmental Science, University of Reading, Reading, UK

4. Department of Geography and Environmental Studies, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa

5. Institute for Social Development, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa

6. Department of Earth Sciences, Air, Water and Landscape Science, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

7. Centre of Natural Hazards and Disaster Science, CNDS, Uppsala, Sweden

Abstract

This paper conceptualises droughts as socioecological phenomena coproduced by the recursive engagement of human and non-human transformations. Through an interdisciplinary approach that integrates political ecology, material geographies and hydroclimatology, this work simultaneously apprehends the role of politics and power in reshaping drought, along with the agency of biophysical processes – soil, vegetation, hydrology and microclimate – that co-produce droughts and their spatiotemporal patterning. The drought-stricken Ladismith in Western Cape, South Africa, is the instrumental case study and point of departure of our empirical analysis. To advance a materiality of drought that seriously accounts for the coevolution of biophysical and political transformations, we alter the spatiotemporal and empirical foci of drought analyses thereby retracing Ladismith’s socioecological history since colonial times. In turn, such extended framework exposes the agency of soil, vegetation, hydrology and microclimate and their metabolic exchanges with processes of colonisation, apartheid, capitalist and neoliberal transformations of South African economy. We argue that the narrow pursuit of profits and capital accumulation of the few has produced a fundamental disruption between nature and society which contributed to transform Ladismith’s drought into a socioecological crisis. Whilst advancing debates on materiality, we note two fundamental contributions to the study of drought. First, our approach makes hydrological accounts of droughts less politically naive and socially blind. Second, it develops a political ecology of droughts and socioecological crises more attuned to the materiality of drought. We contend that apprehending the materiality of drought and the active role of its non-human processes can further understandings of the workings of power and the production of socioecological injustices.

Funder

European Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

Reference104 articles.

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