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Disputed water: Competing knowledge and power asymmetries in the Yali Alto basin,Chile
Institution:1. Institute of Geography, Heidelberg University, Im Neuenheimer Feld 368, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany;2. Institute of Geography, Center for Sustainable Urban Development (CEDEUS) & Global Change Center (CCG-UC), Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, Av. Vicuña Mackenna 4860, 7820426 Macul, Chile;3. Heidelberg Center for the Environment (HCE) & Department of Geography, South Asia Institute (SAI), Heidelberg University, Im Neuenheimer Feld 330, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany
Abstract:Hydrological information – which plays a crucial role in resolving conflicts over water allocation and distribution – is commonly seen as apolitical. However, this type of information is seldom objective and free of biases. Instead, it is used to position arguments and interests in accordance with the prevailing political agendas. Information is structured by complex and conflicting networks of public and private stakeholder interests, further reconstituted in different periods of time and place. Based on a study of the upper Yali basin in the municipality of San Pedro de Melipilla, Chile, we show how knowledge about water is produced, circulated and applied in the context of water scarcity and emerging conflicts over access to groundwater. Building on the notion of the hydrosocial cycle, the qualitative study shows how the production of hydrological reports and its application in political decision-making have reinforced asymmetrical relationships between the stakeholders locked in water conflicts. The lack of capacity of local farmers and community organizations to translate experiences into codified hydrological knowledge further exacerbates these asymmetries. Agro-industrial companies operating in the basin use hydrological assessments to locate and shift the water scarcity problems to the users, whereas locals blame them for accumulating disproportionately large concentrations of water extraction rights. Results contribute to the existing literature on environmental knowledge, arguing that discourses on water scarcity are not objective but shaped by socio-political contingencies. Overemphasising on data and techno-science based information to support certain decisions may be misleading without first unveiling the knowledge production processes operating across power-laden landscapes.
Keywords:Water conflicts  Water scarcity  Political ecology  Hydrosocial cycle  San Pedro de Melipilla
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