Investigating freshwater governance in a decolonization context: Knowledge, values and policies. The case of New-Caledonia

Freshwater supply is complex and contested in most Pacific Island countries. In particular, it is intertwined with questions of access, appropriation and control over land resources, considered together with sea resources as a principal source of wealth and identity in many island nations. In New Caledonia, freshwater governance faces a wide range of issues. The territory has also been engaged in negotiated decolonization since the political agreements of Matignon-Oudinot (1988) and Noumea (1998). In this specific context of continuing decolonization, New Caledonia still needs to develop its own competencies in Water management. Currently, New Caledonia's provinces have extensive powers to administer their territories, which interact with other governance levels (indigenous village, local community, government, the French state). This results in a complex web of legal competencies and multilevel policies which hampers the coordination of interests. Furthermore, Nickel-mining extraction, growing urbanization, complex land uses and scattered water rights continually raise new freshwater management challenges. Through the framework of continuing decolonization, this communication analyzes the dynamics of local governance conflicts related to heterogeneous water uses (settler agriculture, indigenous agriculture, mining activities) and to heterogeneous water laws and rights (especially between indigenous land, and public land). First, we identify the different levels and sites of water governance, and mapping the authorities, interest groups and informal stakeholders that are active in major arenas of water governance. Then, on the basis of a study case in the river of Pouembout, we analyze the emergence and of local governance conflicts through the lens of decolonization. Finally, we discuss the need to analyze the various processes of imaginary building, knowledge formation and implementation values associated with the access to, usage of, and governance of freshwater specifically on indigenous land.

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Main Authors: Bouard, Séverine, Budke, Alexandre, Lejars, Caroline, Bürkner, Joachim, Le Meur, Pierre-Yves, Sabinot, Catherine, Daniell, Katherine Anne
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Language:eng
Published: AAG
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/584946/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/584946/1/Freshwater%20management%20decolonization%20NC%20AAG%202017.pdf
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-5849462024-11-08T17:18:13Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/584946/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/584946/ Investigating freshwater governance in a decolonization context: Knowledge, values and policies. The case of New-Caledonia. Bouard Séverine, Budke Alexandre, Lejars Caroline, Bürkner Joachim, Le Meur Pierre-Yves, Sabinot Catherine, Daniell Katherine Anne. 2017. In : AAG Annual Meeting. AAG. Boston : AAG, Résumé, 1 p. AAG Annual Meeting, Boston, États-Unis, 5 Avril 2017/9 Avril 2017.http://app.core-apps.com/aagam2017/abstract/dcb181785f7fd70d2b1bd16d5a143053 <http://app.core-apps.com/aagam2017/abstract/dcb181785f7fd70d2b1bd16d5a143053> Investigating freshwater governance in a decolonization context: Knowledge, values and policies. The case of New-Caledonia Bouard, Séverine Budke, Alexandre Lejars, Caroline Bürkner, Joachim Le Meur, Pierre-Yves Sabinot, Catherine Daniell, Katherine Anne eng 2017 AAG AAG Annual Meeting Freshwater supply is complex and contested in most Pacific Island countries. In particular, it is intertwined with questions of access, appropriation and control over land resources, considered together with sea resources as a principal source of wealth and identity in many island nations. In New Caledonia, freshwater governance faces a wide range of issues. The territory has also been engaged in negotiated decolonization since the political agreements of Matignon-Oudinot (1988) and Noumea (1998). In this specific context of continuing decolonization, New Caledonia still needs to develop its own competencies in Water management. Currently, New Caledonia's provinces have extensive powers to administer their territories, which interact with other governance levels (indigenous village, local community, government, the French state). This results in a complex web of legal competencies and multilevel policies which hampers the coordination of interests. Furthermore, Nickel-mining extraction, growing urbanization, complex land uses and scattered water rights continually raise new freshwater management challenges. Through the framework of continuing decolonization, this communication analyzes the dynamics of local governance conflicts related to heterogeneous water uses (settler agriculture, indigenous agriculture, mining activities) and to heterogeneous water laws and rights (especially between indigenous land, and public land). First, we identify the different levels and sites of water governance, and mapping the authorities, interest groups and informal stakeholders that are active in major arenas of water governance. Then, on the basis of a study case in the river of Pouembout, we analyze the emergence and of local governance conflicts through the lens of decolonization. Finally, we discuss the need to analyze the various processes of imaginary building, knowledge formation and implementation values associated with the access to, usage of, and governance of freshwater specifically on indigenous land. conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/584946/1/Freshwater%20management%20decolonization%20NC%20AAG%202017.pdf text Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html http://app.core-apps.com/aagam2017/abstract/dcb181785f7fd70d2b1bd16d5a143053 info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/purl/http://app.core-apps.com/aagam2017/abstract/dcb181785f7fd70d2b1bd16d5a143053
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description Freshwater supply is complex and contested in most Pacific Island countries. In particular, it is intertwined with questions of access, appropriation and control over land resources, considered together with sea resources as a principal source of wealth and identity in many island nations. In New Caledonia, freshwater governance faces a wide range of issues. The territory has also been engaged in negotiated decolonization since the political agreements of Matignon-Oudinot (1988) and Noumea (1998). In this specific context of continuing decolonization, New Caledonia still needs to develop its own competencies in Water management. Currently, New Caledonia's provinces have extensive powers to administer their territories, which interact with other governance levels (indigenous village, local community, government, the French state). This results in a complex web of legal competencies and multilevel policies which hampers the coordination of interests. Furthermore, Nickel-mining extraction, growing urbanization, complex land uses and scattered water rights continually raise new freshwater management challenges. Through the framework of continuing decolonization, this communication analyzes the dynamics of local governance conflicts related to heterogeneous water uses (settler agriculture, indigenous agriculture, mining activities) and to heterogeneous water laws and rights (especially between indigenous land, and public land). First, we identify the different levels and sites of water governance, and mapping the authorities, interest groups and informal stakeholders that are active in major arenas of water governance. Then, on the basis of a study case in the river of Pouembout, we analyze the emergence and of local governance conflicts through the lens of decolonization. Finally, we discuss the need to analyze the various processes of imaginary building, knowledge formation and implementation values associated with the access to, usage of, and governance of freshwater specifically on indigenous land.
format conference_item
author Bouard, Séverine
Budke, Alexandre
Lejars, Caroline
Bürkner, Joachim
Le Meur, Pierre-Yves
Sabinot, Catherine
Daniell, Katherine Anne
spellingShingle Bouard, Séverine
Budke, Alexandre
Lejars, Caroline
Bürkner, Joachim
Le Meur, Pierre-Yves
Sabinot, Catherine
Daniell, Katherine Anne
Investigating freshwater governance in a decolonization context: Knowledge, values and policies. The case of New-Caledonia
author_facet Bouard, Séverine
Budke, Alexandre
Lejars, Caroline
Bürkner, Joachim
Le Meur, Pierre-Yves
Sabinot, Catherine
Daniell, Katherine Anne
author_sort Bouard, Séverine
title Investigating freshwater governance in a decolonization context: Knowledge, values and policies. The case of New-Caledonia
title_short Investigating freshwater governance in a decolonization context: Knowledge, values and policies. The case of New-Caledonia
title_full Investigating freshwater governance in a decolonization context: Knowledge, values and policies. The case of New-Caledonia
title_fullStr Investigating freshwater governance in a decolonization context: Knowledge, values and policies. The case of New-Caledonia
title_full_unstemmed Investigating freshwater governance in a decolonization context: Knowledge, values and policies. The case of New-Caledonia
title_sort investigating freshwater governance in a decolonization context: knowledge, values and policies. the case of new-caledonia
publisher AAG
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/584946/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/584946/1/Freshwater%20management%20decolonization%20NC%20AAG%202017.pdf
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