학술논문

Connection amidst Disconnection : Water Struggles, Social Structures, and Geographies of Exclusion in Darjeeling
Document Type
Chapter
Author
Drew, Georgina, author; Rai, Roshan P., author
Source
Darjeeling Reconsidered : Histories, Politics, Environments, 2018, ill.
Subject
water
social networks
identity
postcolonialism
infrastructure
decentralisation
geographies of exclusion and inclusion
resource management
Social Movements and Social Change
Political Sociology
Sociology
Language
English
Abstract
Darjeeling residents face regular water stress despite a high annual amount of rainfall and an abundance of nearby springs and lakes. This chapter examines how the struggle for water manifests in the everyday lives of Darjeeling residents who come from diverse socio-economic backgrounds and live in a range of geographical locations within the burgeoning tourist town. The text explains who is connected to municipal waters, who is not connected to them, and how a physical disconnection to municipal water supplies fosters abjection along with social affinities that can lead to productive adaptations. Emphasis is placed on how support systems, such as social collectives known as samaj, have begun to address the structural inadequacies of the municipal water supply system. These decentralized efforts are promising, but they also speak to the wider geographies of exclusion prevalent in Darjeeling—a town that is spatially marked by extreme contrasts between wealth and poverty.

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