2016
DOI: 10.1111/tran.12169
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Desiring the data state in the Indus Basin

Abstract: The distribution of water between co‐riparian regions in the Indus Basin has been an extremely contentious issue since at least the early 20th century. The reliability of water measurements, in particular, has caused much controversy at multiple scales. This hydropolitical tension has catalysed a key social group – the hydraulic bureaucracy or ‘hydrocracy’ – to enact strategies of depoliticisation. These strategies aim to suppress political contest by calling on external expertise and/or technology to assure t… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…The IWT, forged in the furnace of decolonization and Cold War developmentalism, provides an especially revealing vantage point. Moving forward, hydropolitical analyses should continue to examine the imperatives of downstream vulnerability and basin-wide development as they interact across and through multiple scales (Akhter, 2017). There is also room to explore how territorial and capitalist imperatives interact with nonhuman and nonstate processes.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The IWT, forged in the furnace of decolonization and Cold War developmentalism, provides an especially revealing vantage point. Moving forward, hydropolitical analyses should continue to examine the imperatives of downstream vulnerability and basin-wide development as they interact across and through multiple scales (Akhter, 2017). There is also room to explore how territorial and capitalist imperatives interact with nonhuman and nonstate processes.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, the construction of major dams and other hydraulic infrastructures in the upstream region of Punjab during a period of military rule and forced political centralization caused resentment and bitterness on the part of historically underdeveloped and downstream regions within the Indus Basin, namely Sindh. Far from being consigned to the Cold War past, these infrastructural politics have continued to inform debate around the nature of federalism in Pakistan, and especially debates around water governance and the construction of new dams (Akhter, 2017(Akhter, , 2015a(Akhter, , 2015bHaines, 2017;Mustafa et al, 2013). Thus, the IWT and the accompanying infrastructural program formed at the intersection of geographically uneven development at the scale of the state and the world economy.…”
Section: Indus After Independence: a Legal Geopolitical Historymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…() term “hydrocracies,” continues to be analysed by contemporary scholars who customarily draw on Wittfogel's ideas (Akhter & Ormerod, ; Swyngedouw, ; Worster, ). Here, the physical and symbolic mobilisation of water infrastructure has been shown to facilitate processes of territorialisation and state formation in a broad range of social and ecological contexts (Akhter, ; Carroll, ; Kaika, ; Mukerji, ; Swyngedouw, ; Usher, ).…”
Section: Metabolism Geopolitics and The Hydraulic Statementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Indus River basin in Pakistan is one of the major water resources laboratories in the world (Akhter, ; Gilmartin, ; Meadows & Meadows, ; Mustafa, ; Yu et al, ). It belongs to a class of intensively studied complex river basins that have multiple scales of nested water management (Molle & Wester, ; Pulwarty, ; Reibsame et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%