2015
DOI: 10.1080/02723638.2015.1005414
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Water marginalization at the urban fringe: environmental justice and urban political ecology across the North–South divide

Abstract: This article reconsiders the epistemic and geographic boundaries that have long separated scholarship on urban water poverty and politics in the Global North and South. We stage an encounter between the seemingly dissimilar cases of Tooleville outside of the city of Exeter in California's Central Valley and Bommanahalli outside of Bangalore, India, to illuminate the geography of water marginalization at the fringes of urban areas, and to deepen cross-fertilization between two geographic literatures: environmen… Show more

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Cited by 167 publications
(112 citation statements)
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“…Such work drawing on traditions across informal and precarious conditions beyond EuroAmerica is thus able to speak back to experiences of squatting and autonomous urbanisms in cities such as Berlin. In work on water on the urban fringe, RANGANATHAN and BALAZS (2015) examine marginalization in urban water politics in a small municipality in Tooleville, a municipality in the U.S.A. and Bangalore, India. They find that the process-based political rights discourse in Bangalore could complement the rights-based discourse on access to water in Toolville, and vice versa.…”
Section: The Call To Provincialize Urban Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such work drawing on traditions across informal and precarious conditions beyond EuroAmerica is thus able to speak back to experiences of squatting and autonomous urbanisms in cities such as Berlin. In work on water on the urban fringe, RANGANATHAN and BALAZS (2015) examine marginalization in urban water politics in a small municipality in Tooleville, a municipality in the U.S.A. and Bangalore, India. They find that the process-based political rights discourse in Bangalore could complement the rights-based discourse on access to water in Toolville, and vice versa.…”
Section: The Call To Provincialize Urban Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent work on water in Southern cities has shown just how much can be gleaned when research engages with Southern experiences as opportunities for knowledge building on par with those of Northern contexts. Such work challenges the North–South binary by engaging with water inequalities––typically thought of as Southern problems––in Northern contexts (Jepson and Vanderwalle, 2015) and by studying Northern and Southern cities comparatively, helping to reconceptualize water access, state engagement and political agency (Ranganathan and Balazs, 2015).…”
Section: What Is Worlding? Why World Water Supply?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This will also help to further break down the divide that has been identified between studies in the global North and South by postcolonial scholars such as Ananya Roy, which is something that UPE has been making great strides in (e.g. Ranganathan and Balazs, 2015;McFarlane et al, 2016;Cornea et al, 2017).…”
Section: In Search Of 'The City'mentioning
confidence: 99%