Assembling Commons and Commodities: The Peruvian Water Law between Ideology and Materialisation

The Peruvian water resources law of 2009 (Ley de Recursos Hídricos 29338) gathers contrasting – even divergent – intentions and interests; it discursively projects water to be a national common good and an economic good. The ideas behind the law connect to global currents that promote the marketis...

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Main Author: Astrid Oberborbeck Andersen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Water Alternatives Association 2019-06-01
Series:Water Alternatives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol12/v12issue3/537-a12-2-20/file
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spelling doaj-57dd29cb01ca4fac87820c7b61a2f3d42020-11-24T21:43:37ZengWater Alternatives AssociationWater Alternatives1965-01751965-01752019-06-01122470487Assembling Commons and Commodities: The Peruvian Water Law between Ideology and MaterialisationAstrid Oberborbeck Andersen0 Aalborg UniversityThe Peruvian water resources law of 2009 (Ley de Recursos Hídricos 29338) gathers contrasting – even divergent – intentions and interests; it discursively projects water to be a national common good and an economic good. The ideas behind the law connect to global currents that promote the marketisation of water rights and commodification of water services. This paper will use a historical account of water legislation in Peru as well as detailed ethnographic attention to the implementation of the water law and its infrastructure of governance in the city of Arequipa and the Quilca-Chili River Basin to analyse how the law functions as an interplay between its official text and the ways state officials use it in specific encounters with users and stakeholders. Such encounters vary and have different outcomes, at times presenting openings for groups of actors to gain influence, and at other times excluding participation. A clear-cut analytical common/commodity dichotomy is of little use when trying to understand the dynamics of governance around water in present-day Arequipa and Peru. This paper suggests 'assembling' as analytic to grasp how public and private, marketised and commodified interests come together in the implementation of the law of water resources. http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol12/v12issue3/537-a12-2-20/fileWater legislationwater governanceintegrated water resources managementStateethnographyPeru
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Astrid Oberborbeck Andersen
spellingShingle Astrid Oberborbeck Andersen
Assembling Commons and Commodities: The Peruvian Water Law between Ideology and Materialisation
Water Alternatives
Water legislation
water governance
integrated water resources management
State
ethnography
Peru
author_facet Astrid Oberborbeck Andersen
author_sort Astrid Oberborbeck Andersen
title Assembling Commons and Commodities: The Peruvian Water Law between Ideology and Materialisation
title_short Assembling Commons and Commodities: The Peruvian Water Law between Ideology and Materialisation
title_full Assembling Commons and Commodities: The Peruvian Water Law between Ideology and Materialisation
title_fullStr Assembling Commons and Commodities: The Peruvian Water Law between Ideology and Materialisation
title_full_unstemmed Assembling Commons and Commodities: The Peruvian Water Law between Ideology and Materialisation
title_sort assembling commons and commodities: the peruvian water law between ideology and materialisation
publisher Water Alternatives Association
series Water Alternatives
issn 1965-0175
1965-0175
publishDate 2019-06-01
description The Peruvian water resources law of 2009 (Ley de Recursos Hídricos 29338) gathers contrasting – even divergent – intentions and interests; it discursively projects water to be a national common good and an economic good. The ideas behind the law connect to global currents that promote the marketisation of water rights and commodification of water services. This paper will use a historical account of water legislation in Peru as well as detailed ethnographic attention to the implementation of the water law and its infrastructure of governance in the city of Arequipa and the Quilca-Chili River Basin to analyse how the law functions as an interplay between its official text and the ways state officials use it in specific encounters with users and stakeholders. Such encounters vary and have different outcomes, at times presenting openings for groups of actors to gain influence, and at other times excluding participation. A clear-cut analytical common/commodity dichotomy is of little use when trying to understand the dynamics of governance around water in present-day Arequipa and Peru. This paper suggests 'assembling' as analytic to grasp how public and private, marketised and commodified interests come together in the implementation of the law of water resources.
topic Water legislation
water governance
integrated water resources management
State
ethnography
Peru
url http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol12/v12issue3/537-a12-2-20/file
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