Community aqueducts in Colombia and their struggle for legal recognition
a political ecology approach
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22370/pe.2022.13.3445Keywords:
community aqueducts, water conflict, territory, political ecologyAbstract
In Colombia there are thousands of community aqueducts that supply water to remote rural communities and peripheral urban settlements. These community aqueducts have united in a National Network to fight for legal recognition and support, since Colombia’s neoliberal policies don’t acknowledge their communitarian nature and have imposed legal requirements that push them towards privatization. Departing from a Latin American political ecology perspective, the paper discusses how this struggle is part of a broader regional movement in which a different rationality between humans and nature, not mediated by economic interests, is fighting to survive and advance in contestation to the hegemonic capitalist model. I argue that community aqueducts put in practice the defense of water as a common in an autonomous exercise of governance that contributes to the construction of territories in Latin America.
Downloads
References
ALIMONDA, H TORO PÉREZ, C. & MARTÍN, F. (2017). Ecología política latinoamericana. Buenos Aires, Argentina: CLACSO.
BENAVIDES, C., & ATTANASOVA, D. (2020). Paro, paz y pandemia en Colombia. In B. Bringel & G. Ipleyers (Eds.), Alerta global. Políticas, movimientos sociales y futuros en disputa en tiempos de pandemia (pp.289–301). Buenos Aires, Argentina: CLACSO.
BOELENS, R., HOOGESTEGER, J., SWYNGEDOUW, E., VOS, J., & WESTER, P. (2016). Hydrosocial territories: a political ecology perspective. Water International, 41(1), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1080/02508060.2016.1134898
BUDDS, J. & LINTON, J. (2014). The hydrosocial cycle: defining and mobilizing a relationa-dialectical approach to water.
Geoforum, 57, 170-180. FALS BORDA, O. (1999). Orígenes universales y retos actuales de la IAP. Análisis Político, 38, 73–90. https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/anpol/article/view/79283
ESCOBAR, A. (2015). Territorios de diferencia: la ontologia politica de los “derechos al territorio.” Cuadernos de Antropología Social, 41, 25–28.
FEDERICI, S. (2019). Re-enchanting the world : feminism and the politics of the commons. San Francisco, CA: Pm Press.
FRAGKOU, M.C., MONSALVE-TAPIA, T., PEREIRA-ROA, V., & BOLADOS-ARRATIA, M. (2022). Abastecimiento de agua potable por camiones aljibe durante la megasequía. Un análisis hidrosocial de la provincia de Petorca, Chile. EURE, 48(145), 1-22. https://doi.org/10.7764/eure.48.145.04
FREIRE, P. (1970). Pedagogy of the Oppressed. London, UK: Bloomsbury Academic.
LEFF, E. (2015). Political Ecology: a Latin American Perspective. Desenvolvimento E Meio Ambiente, 35(35). https://doi.org/10.5380/dma.v35i0.44381
MARTÍNEZ ALIER, J. (2005). The environmentalism of the poor: a study of ecological conflicts and valuation. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
MOREANO, M., MOLINA, F., & RAYMOND, B. (2017). Hacia una ecología política global: Aportes desde el sur. In Ecología política latinoamericana. Pensamiento crítico, diferencia latinoamericana y rearticulación epistémica (pp. 197–212). Buenos Aires, Argentina: CLACSO.
PERUGACHE SALAS, J. A. (2020). Procesos de configuración territorial y conflictos por el agua en el municipio de Pasto, Colombia. Collectivus, Revista de Ciencias Sociales, 7(2), 86–111. https://doi.org/10.15648/collectivus.vol7num2.2020.2674
PERUGACHE SALAS, J. A. (2022). “El agua es una causa de todos”: Transformaciones territoriales e hidrosociales en el valle de Atriz, suroccidente andino colombiano (1930 - 2020) [Tesis doctoral]. Universidad Autónoma de México, México.
RED NACIONAL DE ACUEDUCTOS COMUNITARIOS COLOMBIA (2017). Por el derecho a la autogestión comunitaria del agua; iniciativa legislativa para el fortalecimiento y la defensa de los acueductos comunitarios. Bogotá, Colombia. Retrieved from: https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/Documents/Issues/Water/Accountability/RedNacionalAcueductosComunitariosColombia.pdf
RED NACIONAL DE ACUEDUCTOS COMUNITARIOS DE COLOMBIA (2020). Memorias Red Nacional de Acueductos Comunitarios (1st ed.). Bogotá, Colombia: Fundación Heinrich Bóll.
RED NACIONAL DE ACUEDUCTOS COMUNITARIOS COLOMBIA (2021). Vulneraciones del Derecho a la Gestión Comunitaria del Agua en Colombia. Volumen 1. Bogotá, Colombia: Fundación Heinrich Bóll.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Those authors who have publications with this journal accept the following terms:
1.- Authors will retain their copyright and grant the journal the right of first publication of their work, which will simultaneously be subject to the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.es which allows third parties to share, copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format.
- Attribution: credit must be given appropriately, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes have been made. It may be done in any reasonable manner, but not in such a way as to suggest that the use is supported by the licensor.
- Non-Commercial: No use of the material may be made for commercial purposes.
- No Derivatives: Any remix, transformation or creation from the material, the modified material may not be distributed.
- No Additional Restrictions: No legal terms or technological measures may be applied that legally restrict others from making any use permitted by the license.
2.- Authors may adopt other non-exclusive license agreements for distribution of the published version of the work (e.g., depositing it in an institutional telematic archive or publishing it in a monographic volume) as long as the initial publication in this journal is indicated.
3.- Authors are allowed and encouraged to disseminate their work through the Internet (e.g., in institutional telematic archives or on their web page) before and during the submission process, which can produce interesting exchanges and increase citations of the published work. (See The Open Access Effect).