“…Calling for examining water governance in terms of the conceptual "disembedding" of land and water infrastructures from socio-economic, legal, political, and hydraulic networks in which they are in reality entangled [5], this work highlights the role of myriad social actors-water mafias, water tanker operators, plumbers, local councillors, water department engineers, to name a few-in mediating water access in Indian cities [33,36,38,47]. Building on broader accounts examining the role of "the intermediary", "the middleman", "the fixer" [48], "the hustler", "the hard man", and "the wheeler-dealer" [49] (p. 15), this scholarship shows how everyday knowledge and authority are constituted, exercised, experienced, and narrated in relation to water governance in India. It instantiates broader assertions on how the Indian state cannot be thought of as a homogenous, predetermined, static entity [50] capable of exercising power on its own [51].…”