Poverty, Water and Local Development
WORKSHOP: This cross-continental and interdisciplinary workshop was jointly organised by the CLACSO-CROP Programme, Makerere University, The Nile Basin Programme (NBRP) and The Nordic Africa Institute (NAI).
Over the last decades, the multilateral institutions and the development agencies have promoted and strengthened a particular view of the relationship(s) between poverty, water, and development. In this conventional perspective, the fight against poverty is assumed to be a task that is essentially fulfilled by just providing water to the poor in order to meet their nutritional needs, cleaning and sanitation. In the 21st century, however, such an approach does not prevent the production, and reproduction of poverty through generations.
Scholars from Africa and
It was affirmed that since water is increasingly perceived as a scarce natural asset, “More Value per Drop" has become the new credo for achieving the same old goals. As a result, water governance institutions were seen as tacitly discriminating against poor households and economies. In order to create a socially equitable and sustainable development, the orthodox view of the water-poverty-development nexus was consistently questioned by participants who are critically questioning the status quo and seeking to accelerate the pace towards a paradigmatic change in the study of the multiple links among poverty, water, and development.
Seventeen academics from Africa (
Call for papers - Kampala 2011