2016
DOI: 10.1111/1468-2427.12377
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Ponds, Power and Institutions: The Everyday Governance of Accessing Urban Water Bodies in a Small Bengali City

Abstract: While researchers in the growing field of urban political ecology have given significant attention to the fragmented hydroscape that characterizes access to drinking water in the global South, so far the (re)production of other urban waters and its related power relations have been underexplored. This article seeks to contribute to filling this gap by exploring the everyday negotiations over access to urban water bodies, in particular ponds. These are understood as a composite resource that is simultaneously w… Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(56 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
(60 reference statements)
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“…Although not formally endorsed, they are referred to in several policy documents, including the recently introduced National Drinking Water Quality Management Framework that was published in 2015. The framework "recommends implementation of water safety plans for vending water supply that incorporate all components of water vending, including sources, methods of abstraction and transport" [29]. It shifts the responsibility of implementing and operationalizing the safety plans to tanker drivers and vendors and of monitoring and reporting to regulatory organizations (e.g., MMDAs or PURC) in the case vendors are registered or have a contract with the utility and conduct independent surveillance.…”
Section: The Public Utility Regulatory Commissionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although not formally endorsed, they are referred to in several policy documents, including the recently introduced National Drinking Water Quality Management Framework that was published in 2015. The framework "recommends implementation of water safety plans for vending water supply that incorporate all components of water vending, including sources, methods of abstraction and transport" [29]. It shifts the responsibility of implementing and operationalizing the safety plans to tanker drivers and vendors and of monitoring and reporting to regulatory organizations (e.g., MMDAs or PURC) in the case vendors are registered or have a contract with the utility and conduct independent surveillance.…”
Section: The Public Utility Regulatory Commissionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Global financial flows through the Rotary Foundation and party politics play crucial roles in this production of uneven socio-nature. Cornea, Zimmer and Véron (2016) also highlight the role of party politics in shaping access to urban ponds in a small town in West Bengal. There, everyday access is achieved by marginalised groups through diverse strategies that include: affiliation to political parties and/or neighbourhood clubs, often translated into unspecified threats; moral norms of support for the poor; and the (in)visibility of specific ponds within bureaucratic processes.…”
Section: Situated Urban Political Ecologymentioning
confidence: 90%
“…(54) One key contribution from this body of work is that it highlights that situated power relations need to be understood in context and their analysis cannot be easily generalized across contexts of service provision. (55) One key insight from the political ecology tradition is that dominant knowledge structures, mostly developed in the West, fail to capture the complexity of delivery systems already in place. Those knowledge systems thus preclude emancipatory strategies of urban development in lower income countries.…”
Section: Intersectionality As a Recognition Challengementioning
confidence: 99%