Household rainwater tanks: mediating changing relations with water?

Domestic rainwater tanks have become commonplace in Australia's urban landscape, and have become the physical embodiment of the changing relations between householders, water, and water authorities. The aim of our research was to understand these changing relations by examining how domestic rai...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carol Farbotko, Andrea Walton, Aditi Mankad, John Gardner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2014-06-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss2/art62/
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spelling doaj-780a12151f1b48bd8bfb9de4d2058cef2020-11-24T22:31:16ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872014-06-011926210.5751/ES-06632-1902626632Household rainwater tanks: mediating changing relations with water?Carol Farbotko0Andrea Walton1Aditi Mankad2John Gardner3CSIROCSIROCSIROCSIRODomestic rainwater tanks have become commonplace in Australia's urban landscape, and have become the physical embodiment of the changing relations between householders, water, and water authorities. The aim of our research was to understand these changing relations by examining how domestic rainwater tanks are inscribed with meanings and assumptions and thus mediate a relationship between households and government. In particular, we considered how domestic rainwater tanks are implicated in various understandings of entitlements to water collected or used in private domains. We examined how tanks can render visible the contestation over rights and obligations of state and citizen as to what is considered private and public water collection, management, and use at the scale of the household. Our exploration of these issues was conducted through a case study of changing water relations in South East Queensland, Australia, where there has been recent widespread installation of domestic rainwater tanks.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss2/art62/Australiadecentralized water collectiondomestic rainwater tankshousehold waterprivate water userainwater privatizationrainwater tanksurban rainwater collectionurban rainwater storagewater rights
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carol Farbotko
Andrea Walton
Aditi Mankad
John Gardner
spellingShingle Carol Farbotko
Andrea Walton
Aditi Mankad
John Gardner
Household rainwater tanks: mediating changing relations with water?
Ecology and Society
Australia
decentralized water collection
domestic rainwater tanks
household water
private water use
rainwater privatization
rainwater tanks
urban rainwater collection
urban rainwater storage
water rights
author_facet Carol Farbotko
Andrea Walton
Aditi Mankad
John Gardner
author_sort Carol Farbotko
title Household rainwater tanks: mediating changing relations with water?
title_short Household rainwater tanks: mediating changing relations with water?
title_full Household rainwater tanks: mediating changing relations with water?
title_fullStr Household rainwater tanks: mediating changing relations with water?
title_full_unstemmed Household rainwater tanks: mediating changing relations with water?
title_sort household rainwater tanks: mediating changing relations with water?
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Domestic rainwater tanks have become commonplace in Australia's urban landscape, and have become the physical embodiment of the changing relations between householders, water, and water authorities. The aim of our research was to understand these changing relations by examining how domestic rainwater tanks are inscribed with meanings and assumptions and thus mediate a relationship between households and government. In particular, we considered how domestic rainwater tanks are implicated in various understandings of entitlements to water collected or used in private domains. We examined how tanks can render visible the contestation over rights and obligations of state and citizen as to what is considered private and public water collection, management, and use at the scale of the household. Our exploration of these issues was conducted through a case study of changing water relations in South East Queensland, Australia, where there has been recent widespread installation of domestic rainwater tanks.
topic Australia
decentralized water collection
domestic rainwater tanks
household water
private water use
rainwater privatization
rainwater tanks
urban rainwater collection
urban rainwater storage
water rights
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss2/art62/
work_keys_str_mv AT carolfarbotko householdrainwatertanksmediatingchangingrelationswithwater
AT andreawalton householdrainwatertanksmediatingchangingrelationswithwater
AT aditimankad householdrainwatertanksmediatingchangingrelationswithwater
AT johngardner householdrainwatertanksmediatingchangingrelationswithwater
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