The Hydropolitics of Africa:
A Contemporary Challenge
di Margaret Grieco
Marcel Kitissou
Mechthild Nagel
Muna Ndulo
Water is both an essential resource and a source of
disease and conflict in contemporary Africa. And we begin to learn that far
distant processes of consumption and pollution can have their impact on the
water systems of Africa: global warming produced by the material culture of the
first world threatens the weather systems and very survival of developing
countries. In this context, this volume - the product of an expert meeting at
Cornell University's Institute for African Development - traces and tracks the
dynamics of the contemporary hydropolitics of Africa. The volume contains a
variety of approaches to the study of the organisation of water within Africa
ranging from technical essays on water borne diseases, through institutional
analyses of the legal and political arrangements around the distribution of
water to social policy analyses of the unmet demand for water amongst Africa's
poor. Taken as a whole, the volume provides the reader with a useful reference
work on the contemporary hydropolitics of Africa whilst simultaneously
providing a lively introduction to a critical and much neglected area of
African development policy.