Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Knowing Groundwater

Links

View graph of relations

Knowing Groundwater: Embodied Encounters with a Lively Resource

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Knowing Groundwater: Embodied Encounters with a Lively Resource. / Cleaver, F.; Chitata, T.; de Bont, C. et al.
In: Water Alternatives, Vol. 16, No. 1, 31.01.2023, p. 171-192.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Cleaver, F, Chitata, T, de Bont, C, Joseph, K, Börjeson, L & Kemerink-Seyoum, J 2023, 'Knowing Groundwater: Embodied Encounters with a Lively Resource', Water Alternatives, vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 171-192. <https://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol16/v16issue1/691-a16-1-8>

APA

Cleaver, F., Chitata, T., de Bont, C., Joseph, K., Börjeson, L., & Kemerink-Seyoum, J. (2023). Knowing Groundwater: Embodied Encounters with a Lively Resource. Water Alternatives, 16(1), 171-192. https://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol16/v16issue1/691-a16-1-8

Vancouver

Cleaver F, Chitata T, de Bont C, Joseph K, Börjeson L, Kemerink-Seyoum J. Knowing Groundwater: Embodied Encounters with a Lively Resource. Water Alternatives. 2023 Jan 31;16(1):171-192.

Author

Cleaver, F. ; Chitata, T. ; de Bont, C. et al. / Knowing Groundwater : Embodied Encounters with a Lively Resource. In: Water Alternatives. 2023 ; Vol. 16, No. 1. pp. 171-192.

Bibtex

@article{11f20f461c1446a3b51a138ca5b48881,
title = "Knowing Groundwater: Embodied Encounters with a Lively Resource",
abstract = "This paper is concerned with how water prospectors, well diggers, and irrigation farmers come to know groundwater. Drawing on cases from Tanzania and Zimbabwe, the paper shows that much knowledge is derived from the close encounters with groundwater that occur through hard physical work, mediated by the use of lowcost tools and technologies. In this paper we show how this knowledge is embedded in everyday livelihoods, landscapes, and moral ecological rationalities. Through empirical material of such close encounters with groundwater, we make two interrelated points. Firstly, we draw attention to the importance of embodied forms of knowledge in shaping engagements with groundwater. Frequent close physical interactions with groundwater generate rich and intimate understandings of the changing quality and quantity of water flows. These understandings become primary ways in which people in communities know water, which is lively and sometimes invisible. Secondly, we argue that, though apparently mundane, reliant on low-cost technology, and highly localised, these encounters significantly shape broader socio-natural relationships in emerging groundwater economies. Amongst other examples, our data show groundwater prospectors monitoring the depth of borehole drilling in a shared aquifer in an attempt to ensure equitable access for different users. In concluding the paper, we reflect on the extent to which the knowledge and relationships formed through close physical encounters with groundwater have the potential to shape trajectories of groundwater management.",
keywords = "Embodied knowledge, farmers, groundwater economies, prospectors, well diggers, Tanzania, Zimbabwe",
author = "F. Cleaver and T. Chitata and {de Bont}, C. and K. Joseph and L. B{\"o}rjeson and J. Kemerink-Seyoum",
year = "2023",
month = jan,
day = "31",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "171--192",
journal = "Water Alternatives",
issn = "1965-0175",
publisher = "Water Alternatives Association",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Knowing Groundwater

T2 - Embodied Encounters with a Lively Resource

AU - Cleaver, F.

AU - Chitata, T.

AU - de Bont, C.

AU - Joseph, K.

AU - Börjeson, L.

AU - Kemerink-Seyoum, J.

PY - 2023/1/31

Y1 - 2023/1/31

N2 - This paper is concerned with how water prospectors, well diggers, and irrigation farmers come to know groundwater. Drawing on cases from Tanzania and Zimbabwe, the paper shows that much knowledge is derived from the close encounters with groundwater that occur through hard physical work, mediated by the use of lowcost tools and technologies. In this paper we show how this knowledge is embedded in everyday livelihoods, landscapes, and moral ecological rationalities. Through empirical material of such close encounters with groundwater, we make two interrelated points. Firstly, we draw attention to the importance of embodied forms of knowledge in shaping engagements with groundwater. Frequent close physical interactions with groundwater generate rich and intimate understandings of the changing quality and quantity of water flows. These understandings become primary ways in which people in communities know water, which is lively and sometimes invisible. Secondly, we argue that, though apparently mundane, reliant on low-cost technology, and highly localised, these encounters significantly shape broader socio-natural relationships in emerging groundwater economies. Amongst other examples, our data show groundwater prospectors monitoring the depth of borehole drilling in a shared aquifer in an attempt to ensure equitable access for different users. In concluding the paper, we reflect on the extent to which the knowledge and relationships formed through close physical encounters with groundwater have the potential to shape trajectories of groundwater management.

AB - This paper is concerned with how water prospectors, well diggers, and irrigation farmers come to know groundwater. Drawing on cases from Tanzania and Zimbabwe, the paper shows that much knowledge is derived from the close encounters with groundwater that occur through hard physical work, mediated by the use of lowcost tools and technologies. In this paper we show how this knowledge is embedded in everyday livelihoods, landscapes, and moral ecological rationalities. Through empirical material of such close encounters with groundwater, we make two interrelated points. Firstly, we draw attention to the importance of embodied forms of knowledge in shaping engagements with groundwater. Frequent close physical interactions with groundwater generate rich and intimate understandings of the changing quality and quantity of water flows. These understandings become primary ways in which people in communities know water, which is lively and sometimes invisible. Secondly, we argue that, though apparently mundane, reliant on low-cost technology, and highly localised, these encounters significantly shape broader socio-natural relationships in emerging groundwater economies. Amongst other examples, our data show groundwater prospectors monitoring the depth of borehole drilling in a shared aquifer in an attempt to ensure equitable access for different users. In concluding the paper, we reflect on the extent to which the knowledge and relationships formed through close physical encounters with groundwater have the potential to shape trajectories of groundwater management.

KW - Embodied knowledge

KW - farmers

KW - groundwater economies

KW - prospectors

KW - well diggers

KW - Tanzania

KW - Zimbabwe

M3 - Journal article

VL - 16

SP - 171

EP - 192

JO - Water Alternatives

JF - Water Alternatives

SN - 1965-0175

IS - 1

ER -