The Ethics of Water: From Commodification to Common Ownership

The Ethics of Water: From Commodification to Common Ownership

by Cameron Fioret
The Ethics of Water: From Commodification to Common Ownership

The Ethics of Water: From Commodification to Common Ownership

by Cameron Fioret

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Overview

In this global approach to climate change and freshwater access, Cameron Fioret explores the harmful effects of water commodification. Making use of deliberative democratic theory, Fioret suggests tools that can change the balance of democratic decision-making power by rethinking the governance of water more broadly.

Five main case studies including Detroit, Cochabamba, and Kerala span four continents to convey the global and local scope of normative water issues. These examples draw on contemporary water justice movements to explore how anti-water-commodification struggles can utilize water recommoning practices to make water governance processes more deeply democratic. Highlighting the ethical and sociopolitical ramifications of water injustice, this study moves beyond the surface issue of distributional concerns. To this end, Fioret draws on research in democratic political theory and environmental philosophy to consider what right people have to water, the putative harms of privatizing and commodifying water, common ownership, and legal protections, alongside local and transnational political activism. In navigating these pressing issues, The Ethics of Water provides a searing analysis of water commodification and political domination today.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781350348844
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 12/26/2024
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Cameron Fioret is Visiting Research Fellow at the United Nations University Institute on Comparative Regional Integration Studies (UNU-CRIS), as well as a Visiting Scholar at the U-M Water Centre in the Graham Sustainability Institute at the University of Michigan, USA.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Water, Rights-Based Arguments and Social Entitlement
2. An Explication of Common Ownership and Common Territory
3. Water Justice as Socioenvironmental Justice
4. The Protection of Rights to Water Through Law and Politics
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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