The risk of water conflicts in aotearoa-new zealand : emergence and intensification / Adan E. Suazo.
2022
HD1701.A1
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Title
The risk of water conflicts in aotearoa-new zealand : emergence and intensification / Adan E. Suazo.
Author
ISBN
9783031066603 (electronic bk.)
303106660X (electronic bk.)
9783031066597
3031066596
303106660X (electronic bk.)
9783031066597
3031066596
Published
Cham : Springer, 2022.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource : illustrations (black and white, and color).
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-031-06660-3 doi
Call Number
HD1701.A1
Dewey Decimal Classification
333.9100993
Summary
This book focuses on water disputes in New Zealand: a country where such conflicts are assumed to be non-existing. Rarely are water disputes examined in areas where water resources abound, and where the political framework that governs their access and use is strong. Environmental security literature has devoted a significant amount of attention to the nexus between resource abundance and conflict. Important research has assessed this relationship by focusing on non-renewable resource wealth as a causal determinant of conflict, but little is known about the conditions that influence the emergence and intensification of conflict in water abundant environments. By most accounts, New Zealand is one of the most water-rich countries in the world. Even though violent conflict over water does not normally materialize in New Zealand, conflicts and incompatible claims motivated by water bottling, the growth of some types of agriculture, tourism, and water treatment strategies, continue to surface. Little, however, is known about how and why these conflicts emerge and intensify in a country such as New Zealand. To address this lacuna, this project asks the following research question: How and why does the commercialization of freshwater influence the emergence and intensification of hydropolitical conflict in New Zealand? This study presents two central arguments. First, that the introduction of a commercial enterprise motivates the emergence of hydropolitical conflict intentionality if the enterprise is incompatible with the interests of local communities. And second, hydropolitical conflict risk intensifies in accordance with the level of trust that communities pose upon the approval and appeals process that supports a commercial operation. To test these arguments, this study examines the effects of water bottling and water chlorination on the towns of Ashburton (Canterbury) and Glenorchy (Otago), by employing a tripartite analysis comprised, first, of a conflict intentionality and engagement assessment, second, of a comparative case study analysis, and third, of a conflict intentionality classification. The data suggests that hydropolitical conflict risk is low when communities trust the approval and appeals process behind any given commercial operation. Water-based conflict risk however is likely to escalate when local communities lose trust in the above processes and the institutions that administer them.
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Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Revisiting Abundance Theory
Chapter 3. Water Abundance and Water Incompatibilities in New Zealand
Chapter 4. Research Design
Chapter 5. Glenorchy
Chapter 6. Ashburton
Chapter 7. Analysis
Chapter 8. Conflict Intentionality Classification
Chapter 9. Research Intersections and Limitations
Chapter 10. Conclusions.
Chapter 2. Revisiting Abundance Theory
Chapter 3. Water Abundance and Water Incompatibilities in New Zealand
Chapter 4. Research Design
Chapter 5. Glenorchy
Chapter 6. Ashburton
Chapter 7. Analysis
Chapter 8. Conflict Intentionality Classification
Chapter 9. Research Intersections and Limitations
Chapter 10. Conclusions.