In Colombia there are thousands of community aqueducts that supply water to remote rural communities and peripheral urban settlements. These community aqueducts have united in a National Network to fight for legal recognition and support, since Colombia’s neoliberal policies don’t acknowledge their communitarian nature and have imposed legal requirements that push them towards privatization. Departing from a Latin American political ecology perspective, the paper discusses how this struggle is part of a broader regional movement in which a different rationality between humans and nature, not mediated by economic interests, is fighting to survive and advance in contestation to the hegemonic capitalist model. I argue that community aqueducts put in practice the defense of water as a common in an autonomous exercise of governance that contributes to the construction of territories in Latin America.
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