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Worldviews and the everyday politics of community water management

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Worldviews and the everyday politics of community water management. / Cleaver, Frances; Whaley, Luke; Mwathunga, Evance.
In: Water Alternatives, Vol. 14, No. 3, 06.10.2021, p. 645-663.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Cleaver F, Whaley L, Mwathunga E. Worldviews and the everyday politics of community water management. Water Alternatives. 2021 Oct 6;14(3):645-663.

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Cleaver, Frances ; Whaley, Luke ; Mwathunga, Evance. / Worldviews and the everyday politics of community water management. In: Water Alternatives. 2021 ; Vol. 14, No. 3. pp. 645-663.

Bibtex

@article{d81026caa915472593996777365d509d,
title = "Worldviews and the everyday politics of community water management",
abstract = "This article highlights one important reason why attempts to achieve sustainable development through community management often fail – the neglect of worldviews. It addresses a gap in existing research on institutional bricolage by focussing on the core role that beliefs and rationales play in resource governance. Our research into rural water supply in Malawi and Uganda was conducted through a variety of ethnographic methods including year-long community diaries. Drawing on this, we demonstrate how worldviews shape local water management arrangements and their outcomes. We unpick three dimensions of the work that worldviews do In (1) making sense of socio-natural events and processes, (2) maintaining unequal social orders, and (3) serving as resources for institutional arrangements. The article concludes with a reflection on how our approach meaningfully furthers critical water studies, and on the challenges faced by development initiatives in operationalising such insights.",
keywords = "Groundwater, irrigation infrastructure, smallholder farming, knowledge, Zimbabwe",
author = "Frances Cleaver and Luke Whaley and Evance Mwathunga",
year = "2021",
month = oct,
day = "6",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "645--663",
journal = "Water Alternatives",
issn = "1965-0175",
publisher = "Water Alternatives Association",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Worldviews and the everyday politics of community water management

AU - Cleaver, Frances

AU - Whaley, Luke

AU - Mwathunga, Evance

PY - 2021/10/6

Y1 - 2021/10/6

N2 - This article highlights one important reason why attempts to achieve sustainable development through community management often fail – the neglect of worldviews. It addresses a gap in existing research on institutional bricolage by focussing on the core role that beliefs and rationales play in resource governance. Our research into rural water supply in Malawi and Uganda was conducted through a variety of ethnographic methods including year-long community diaries. Drawing on this, we demonstrate how worldviews shape local water management arrangements and their outcomes. We unpick three dimensions of the work that worldviews do In (1) making sense of socio-natural events and processes, (2) maintaining unequal social orders, and (3) serving as resources for institutional arrangements. The article concludes with a reflection on how our approach meaningfully furthers critical water studies, and on the challenges faced by development initiatives in operationalising such insights.

AB - This article highlights one important reason why attempts to achieve sustainable development through community management often fail – the neglect of worldviews. It addresses a gap in existing research on institutional bricolage by focussing on the core role that beliefs and rationales play in resource governance. Our research into rural water supply in Malawi and Uganda was conducted through a variety of ethnographic methods including year-long community diaries. Drawing on this, we demonstrate how worldviews shape local water management arrangements and their outcomes. We unpick three dimensions of the work that worldviews do In (1) making sense of socio-natural events and processes, (2) maintaining unequal social orders, and (3) serving as resources for institutional arrangements. The article concludes with a reflection on how our approach meaningfully furthers critical water studies, and on the challenges faced by development initiatives in operationalising such insights.

KW - Groundwater

KW - irrigation infrastructure

KW - smallholder farming

KW - knowledge

KW - Zimbabwe

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

SP - 645

EP - 663

JO - Water Alternatives

JF - Water Alternatives

SN - 1965-0175

IS - 3

ER -