Liquid futures: Water management systems and anticipated environments
Climate change and its impact on hydrological dynamics have become key topics of concern among water managers and policy makers in many parts of the world. Yet while practitioners often frame adaptation to a climate-changed future as a novel issue, ideas about future environments have long influence...
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sg-smu-ink.cis_research-10922024-04-17T03:36:16Z Liquid futures: Water management systems and anticipated environments RANDLE, Sayd BARNES, Jessica Climate change and its impact on hydrological dynamics have become key topics of concern among water managers and policy makers in many parts of the world. Yet while practitioners often frame adaptation to a climate-changed future as a novel issue, ideas about future environments have long influenced systems of water management. Reviewing ethnographic and historical accounts of waterscapes across the globe, this article examines the relationship between imagined environmental futures and the policies, practices, infrastructures of water management and legal frameworks. We show, first, how conflicting ideas about environmental stasis and perturbation have been built into water networks across space and time. In some cases, notions of radical landscape change have underpinned these systems, as in programs dedicated to land "reclamation" or interbasin water transfer schemes. In other contexts, water systems have developed based on visions of long-term sociohydrological stability. Second, we highlight how contrasting notions of human capacity to change environmental outcomes have played into water management systems. In some cases, there has been an assumption of the potential for and desirability of full human control; in others, there has been more recognition of the limits of such mastery. Exploring the wide range of environmental imaginaries mobilized through water management, we contextualize contemporary efforts to build resilient, "climate proof" waterscapes.This article is categorized under:Human Water > Water as Imagined and RepresentedScience of Water > Water Quality 2018-03-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cis_research/93 info:doi/10.1002/wat2.1274 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/cis_research/article/1092/viewcontent/liquid_futures.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection College of Integrative Studies eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University climate change hydrological dynamics water managers policy makers adaptation future environments waterscapes imagined environmental futures policies practices infrastructures legal frameworks environmental stasis perturbation water networks land reclamation interbasin water transfer schemes sociohydrological stability human capacity environmental outcomes full human control mastery environmental imaginaries resilient waterscapes climate proof Place and Environment |
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climate change hydrological dynamics water managers policy makers adaptation future environments waterscapes imagined environmental futures policies practices infrastructures legal frameworks environmental stasis perturbation water networks land reclamation interbasin water transfer schemes sociohydrological stability human capacity environmental outcomes full human control mastery environmental imaginaries resilient waterscapes climate proof Place and Environment |
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climate change hydrological dynamics water managers policy makers adaptation future environments waterscapes imagined environmental futures policies practices infrastructures legal frameworks environmental stasis perturbation water networks land reclamation interbasin water transfer schemes sociohydrological stability human capacity environmental outcomes full human control mastery environmental imaginaries resilient waterscapes climate proof Place and Environment RANDLE, Sayd BARNES, Jessica Liquid futures: Water management systems and anticipated environments |
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Climate change and its impact on hydrological dynamics have become key topics of concern among water managers and policy makers in many parts of the world. Yet while practitioners often frame adaptation to a climate-changed future as a novel issue, ideas about future environments have long influenced systems of water management. Reviewing ethnographic and historical accounts of waterscapes across the globe, this article examines the relationship between imagined environmental futures and the policies, practices, infrastructures of water management and legal frameworks. We show, first, how conflicting ideas about environmental stasis and perturbation have been built into water networks across space and time. In some cases, notions of radical landscape change have underpinned these systems, as in programs dedicated to land "reclamation" or interbasin water transfer schemes. In other contexts, water systems have developed based on visions of long-term sociohydrological stability. Second, we highlight how contrasting notions of human capacity to change environmental outcomes have played into water management systems. In some cases, there has been an assumption of the potential for and desirability of full human control; in others, there has been more recognition of the limits of such mastery. Exploring the wide range of environmental imaginaries mobilized through water management, we contextualize contemporary efforts to build resilient, "climate proof" waterscapes.This article is categorized under:Human Water > Water as Imagined and RepresentedScience of Water > Water Quality |
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text |
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RANDLE, Sayd BARNES, Jessica |
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RANDLE, Sayd BARNES, Jessica |
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RANDLE, Sayd |
title |
Liquid futures: Water management systems and anticipated environments |
title_short |
Liquid futures: Water management systems and anticipated environments |
title_full |
Liquid futures: Water management systems and anticipated environments |
title_fullStr |
Liquid futures: Water management systems and anticipated environments |
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Liquid futures: Water management systems and anticipated environments |
title_sort |
liquid futures: water management systems and anticipated environments |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2018 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cis_research/93 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/cis_research/article/1092/viewcontent/liquid_futures.pdf |
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