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Nation-building, industrialisation, and spectacle: Political functions of Gujarat’s Narmada pipeline project

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  • Luxion, Mona

Abstract

Since 2000 the Indian state of Gujarat has been working to construct a state-wide water grid to connect 75% of its approximately 60 million urban and rural residents to drinking water sourced from the controversial Sardar Sarovar Dam on the Narmada River. This project represents a massive undertaking – it is billed as the largest drinking water project in the world – and is part of a broader predilection toward large, concrete-heavy supply-side solutions to water insecurity across present-day India. This paper tracks the claims and narratives used to promote the project, the political context in which it has emerged, the purposes it serves and, following Ferguson (1990), the functioning of the discursive-bureaucratic 'machine' of which it is a product. The dam’s reinvention as the solution to Gujarat’s drinking water shortfall – increasingly for cities and Special Industrial Regions – reflects a concern with attracting and retaining foreign investment through the creation of so-called 'world-class' infrastructure. At the same time, this reinvention has contributed to a project of nation-building, while remaining cloaked in a discourse of technological neutrality. The heavy infrastructure renders visible Gujarat’s commitment to 'development' even when that promise has yet to be realised for many, while the promise of Narmada water gives Gujarat’s leaders political capital with favoured investors and political supporters. In conclusion, I suggest that the success of infrastructure mega-projects as a political tool is not intrinsically tied to their ability to achieve their technical and social objectives. Instead, the 'spectacle' of ambitious infrastructural development projects may well yield political gains that outweigh, for a time, the real-world costs of their inequity and unsustainability.

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  • Luxion, Mona, 2017. "Nation-building, industrialisation, and spectacle: Political functions of Gujarat’s Narmada pipeline project," SocArXiv ewa8b, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:ewa8b
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/ewa8b
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Andrea Biswas-Tortajada, 2014. "The Gujarat State-Wide Water Supply Grid: a step towards water security," International Journal of Water Resources Development, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 30(1), pages 78-90, March.
    2. Ranjit Dwivedi, 1999. "Displacement, Risks and Resistance: Local Perceptions and Actions in the Sardar Sarovar," Development and Change, International Institute of Social Studies, vol. 30(1), pages 43-78, January.
    3. Mehta, Lyla, 2001. "The Manufacture of Popular Perceptions of Scarcity: Dams and Water-Related Narratives in Gujarat, India," World Development, Elsevier, vol. 29(12), pages 2025-2041, December.
    4. Lyla Mehta, 2011. "Experiences and Reimaginings of Development from a Kutchi Village," IDS Bulletin, Blackwell Publishing, vol. 42(5), pages 30-35, September.
    5. Tommaso Bobbio, 2012. "Making Gujarat Vibrant: , development and the rise of subnationalism in India," Third World Quarterly, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 33(4), pages 657-672.
    6. Shah, Tushaar & Bhatt, Sonal & Shah, R.K. & Talati, Jayesh, 2008. "Groundwater governance through electricity supply management: Assessing an innovative intervention in Gujarat, western India," Agricultural Water Management, Elsevier, vol. 95(11), pages 1233-1242, November.
    7. Rao, M. Govinda, 2015. "The Making of Miracles in Indian States: Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, and Gujarat," OUP Catalogue, Oxford University Press, number 9780190236625 edited by Panagariya, Arvind, Decembrie.
    8. Tsang, Eric W. K., 2014. "Old and New," Management and Organization Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 10(03), pages 390-390, November.
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    1. Meera Mehta & Dinesh Mehta & Jaladhi Vavaliya, 2021. "Urban drinking water security in Gujarat," Journal of Social and Economic Development, Springer;Institute for Social and Economic Change, vol. 23(1), pages 166-180, June.

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