Divided waters: a hydropolitical analysis of development, space, and labour in N'Djamena, Chad
dc.contributor.advisor
Munoz Martin, Jose
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Donovan, Kevin
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Furniss, Jamie
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Maazaz, Ismaël
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2022-08-16T11:44:08Z
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2022-08-16T11:44:08Z
dc.date.issued
2022-07-25
dc.description.abstract
This thesis analyses the everyday politics of water in N’Djamena, Chad and its implications
for various realms in the urbanscape. Water workers and end-users coexist and punctually
collaborate with numerous other space-users in public places such as community squares,
where water is prominently sourced. I argue that water and social life occupy distinct spaces
within the same squares, a dissociative process that leads to “multiplex spaces”. The research
further demonstrates that water access and supply in peripheral and working-class
neighbourhoods of N’Djamena operate as a moral economy characterised by precarity and
shifting temporalities but also strong agentive struggles and solidarity. Similarly, agents of
Chad’s National Water Company engage in “hydraulic bricolages” during maintenance and
connection operations. Despite endeavours to build universal infrastructural networks, multiple
water supply schemes coexist in N’Djamena, as exemplified by the borehole economy. As such,
localised water delivery solutions are likely to prevail, a situation of “reticular urbanism.”
Furthermore, development projects funded by foreign donors reshape N’Djamena’s waterscape.
These projects rely on local fieldworkers that engage in community work. Community work
undertaken by municipal officers and neighbourhood association members appears as an
essential form of relational work that require in-depth social and technical knowledge. Finally,
dynamics of water patronage suggest that politicians and local leaders can choose different
paths that imply contrasting levels of territoriality; while professional politicians might decide
to fund water works to build up their popularity in their constituencies, chiefs tend to rely on
water as a profitable business venture.
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dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/39310
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http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/2561
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en
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dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Maazaz, Ismaël. 2017. “Pétrole et « Syndrome Circassien ». Emergence et Fragmentation d’un Assemblage Global Dans Les Années 2000 Au Tchad.” Cahier Tchadien Des Sciences Humaines 1
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dc.relation.hasversion
Maazaz, Ismaël. 2021. “Hydraulic Bricolages: Coexisting Water Supply and Access Regimes in N’Djamena, Chad.” EchoGéo 57.
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dc.subject
water resources policy
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hydraulic transactions
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ethnographic fieldwork
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water workers
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water supply schemes
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street water dealers
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Chad
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N’Djamena
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water patronage
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dc.title
Divided waters: a hydropolitical analysis of development, space, and labour in N'Djamena, Chad
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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