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Gray Zones: The Everyday Practices and Governance of Water beyond the Network

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  • Yaffa Truelove

Abstract

In Delhi, India, the centralized water supply is highly fractured and sporadic, reaching less than half of residents on an everyday basis. As a result, urbanites across social groups coproduce water infrastructure through reliance on a host of alternate sources, technologies, and political actors. Such diverse delivery configurations and plural logics do not fit the conventional dualistic framing of urban water governance as either state or private, legal or illegal, and divided along the geographies of formal or informal settlements, however. This article instead shows that everyday water is procured and governed through a “gray zone” of hybrid institutional and infrastructural arrangements. By tracing diverse water regimes across Delhi’s settlements, I show that gray zones are (1) characterized by political assemblages that defy dualisms such as legal–illegal, formal–informal, and public–private; (2) typified by a spectrum of differing legitimacies associated with the practices and (il)legality of water and its infrastructures; and (3) produced through, and productive of, social power relations and embodied forms of intersecting gender, class, caste, and ethno-religious differences in the city. This article demonstrates that gray zones provide a heuristic device to analyze in/formality, infrastructure, and governance in cities of the Global South such as Delhi, contributing to a situated and embodied urban political ecology of water. My findings reveal that gray zones of water have distinct embodied and political ramifications that produce unequal hydrosocial geographies not only within the city but also at the neighborhood, household, and bodily scales. Key Words: Delhi, embodied urban political ecology, feminist political ecology, infrastructure, urban water governance.

Suggested Citation

  • Yaffa Truelove, 2019. "Gray Zones: The Everyday Practices and Governance of Water beyond the Network," Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 109(6), pages 1758-1774, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:raagxx:v:109:y:2019:i:6:p:1758-1774
    DOI: 10.1080/24694452.2019.1581598
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Yaffa Truelove, 2021. "Who is the state? Infrastructural power and everyday water governance in Delhi," Environment and Planning C, , vol. 39(2), pages 282-299, March.
    2. Ratoola Kundu & Suchismita Chatterjee, 2021. "Pipe dreams? Practices of everyday governance of heterogeneous configurations of water supply in Baruipur, a small town in India," Environment and Planning C, , vol. 39(2), pages 318-335, March.
    3. Hofmann, Pascale, 2022. "Toward equitable urban water supply and sanitation in Dar es Salaam: The dialectic relationship between policy-driven and everyday practices," Utilities Policy, Elsevier, vol. 78(C).
    4. Sletto, Bjørn & Luguana, Alexandra Magaly Lamina & Rakes, Kayla & Stycos, Mary, 2022. "Intersectionality, gender, and project-induced displacement in the informal city: The struggle over stormwater development in Los Platanitos, Dominican Republic," World Development, Elsevier, vol. 158(C).
    5. Jérémie Sanchez & Su Su Myat, 2021. "Expanding the Southern urban critique: Elite politics, popular politics, and self-governance in the wards of Mandalay," Environment and Planning C, , vol. 39(7), pages 1453-1470, November.
    6. Heinrich Zozmann & Alexander Morgan & Christian Klassert & Bernd Klauer & Erik Gawel, 2022. "Can Tanker Water Services Contribute to Sustainable Access to Water? A Systematic Review of Case Studies in Urban Areas," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 14(17), pages 1-27, September.
    7. Nate Millington & Suraya Scheba, 2021. "Day Zero and The Infrastructures of Climate Change: Water Governance, Inequality, and Infrastructural Politics in Cape Town's Water Crisis," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 45(1), pages 116-132, January.
    8. Srivastwa, Amit Kumar & Kabra, Asmita, 2023. "Socio-spatial Infrastructures: Drinking Water Supply and Formation of Unequal Socio-technological Relations in Rural Southern Bihar," Ecology, Economy and Society - the INSEE Journal, Indian Society of Ecological Economics (INSEE), vol. 6(02), July.
    9. Natasha Cornea, 2020. "Territorialising control in urban West Bengal: Social clubs and everyday governance in the spaces between state and party," Environment and Planning C, , vol. 38(2), pages 312-328, March.

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