“…Scholars across disciplines have increasingly highlighted concerns around equity and justice in water governance (e.g., Beresford et al, 2023; Ingram, 1990; Perreault, 2014; Sultana, 2018; Sultana & Loftus, 2019; Swyngedouw, 2004; Zwarteveen et al, 2017; Zwarteveen & Boelens, 2014), and around power and politics in collaborative governance broadly (Klijn & Skelcher, 2007; May, 2016; Purdy, 2012; Ran & Qi, 2016). Harrington (2017) summarizes the core of many of these concerns when he argues that collaborative water governance processes often ignore the political nature of water, meaning they overlook the social processes “that determine what water is, and what specifically needs protection in the quest for water security” (p. 255).…”