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The Rationed City: The Politics of Water, Housing, and Land Use in Drought-Parched São Paulo
Author(s) -
Daniel Aldana Cohen
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
public culture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.564
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1527-8018
pISSN - 0899-2363
DOI - 10.1215/08992363-3427451
Subject(s) - rationing , politics , water scarcity , state (computer science) , scarcity , dilemma , commons , democracy , political economy , political science , sociology , economics , geography , economic growth , market economy , law , health care , philosophy , archaeology , epistemology , algorithm , computer science , agriculture
Specters of rationing haunt metro Sao Paulo. Water supplies have plunged to historic, dangerous lows. The idea of rationing has become a flash-point. The state’s center-right governor has insisted that rationing be avoided at all costs and the state’s profit-driven water utility has followed suit, even as dwindling water supplies are being opaquely and unequally distributed. To make sense of the situation, I propose, through an exploration of the crisis’s origins and recent developments that builds on over one year of ethnographic fieldwork, a new approach to ecological scarcity. It revitalizes, in a socioecological and crisis-sensitive form, Manuel Castells’s concept of collective consumption politics, with a focus on housing and land use. The question is how acute crises and longstanding socioecological struggles interact, from above and below. In Sao Paulo, this dilemma takes the form of housing movements’ and environmentalists’ longstanding estrangement, but prompted by crisis, some leaders are experimenting with cooperation. In an echo of the June 2013 bus fare protests, this fledgling coalition proposes a democratic version of rationing that goes beyond the distribution of water through pipes and that threatens broader power arrangements.

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