Making and Misconceiving Community in South Indian Tank Irrigation

dc.contributor.authorMosse, Daviden_US
dc.coverage.regionMiddle East & South Asiaen_US
dc.date.accessioned2009-07-31T14:32:51Z
dc.date.available2009-07-31T14:32:51Z
dc.date.issued1998en_US
dc.date.submitted2001-07-02en_US
dc.date.submitted2001-07-02en_US
dc.description.abstract"There is today a pervasive policy consensus in favour of the transfer of resources management from state to community. The rationale for such policy hardly needs to be rehearsed for the present readership (cf. Ostrom 1990). The assumptions about community, resource management and the state which are involved, however, do invite reflection. "While, as I will show below, ideas of community (in irrigation) are sociologically naive and inaccurate in their assumptions of homogeneity, co-operation, autonomy from the state (etc.), and while they divert attention away from some of the most significant social dynamics of resources 'management', this is not the only: measure by which the notion of community is to be judged (Li 1996). In common property debates today, 'community' is, above all, a cultural idea actively evoked and manipulated in the legitimation of strategies of resource use at local and governmental levels. "The force of 'community' as a cultural idea comes from its place in policy discourse. I want now to show how contemporary policy on 'community management' within south Indian irrigation has its roots in the exigencies of colonial government, and how community 'tradition' was evoked to validate state irrigation strategies in 19th century Madras. The case not only illustrates the connection between power and forms of knowing 'the other' (Said 1979), but also shows that 'Orientalism...is not just a way of thinking...but: a way of conceptualising the landscape of the colonial world that makes it susceptible to certain kinds of management' (Breckenridge & van der Veer 1993:6)."en_US
dc.identifier.citationconfdatesJune 10-14en_US
dc.identifier.citationconferenceCrossing Boundaries, the Seventh Biennial Conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Propertyen_US
dc.identifier.citationconflocVancouver, British Columbia, Canadaen_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10535/882
dc.languageEnglishen_US
dc.subjectIASCen_US
dc.subjectcommon pool resourcesen_US
dc.subjectirrigationen_US
dc.subjectcommunity participationen_US
dc.subjectwater users' associationsen_US
dc.subjectanthropologyen_US
dc.subject.sectorWater Resource & Irrigationen_US
dc.submitter.emailhess@indiana.eduen_US
dc.titleMaking and Misconceiving Community in South Indian Tank Irrigationen_US
dc.typeConference Paperen_US
dc.type.publishedunpublisheden_US

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