by Jeremy Allouche (Author)
This book unpacks and challenges `the nexus' concept, exploring how it recasts old debates around water storage and large-scale food/energy production in a new crisis narrative of scarcity and insecurity.
The water-energy-food `nexus' has received growing attention from policymakers, researchers, and practitioners. A key premise of `the nexus' is that water use is interdependent with energy and food production. The dominant global policy framing of the nexus emphasizes a scarcity-crisis narrative producing a sense of growing water, food and energy insecurities. In turn, it has promoted large-scale, control-type technologies of mass production for meeting food and energy demand in the belief that they are more secure. This approach, in practice can result in the redistribution of access to natural resources away from small-scale users.
This book argues that the convergence of security and sustainability perspectives in dominant framings of `the nexus' is governed by stability- and equilibrium-thinking, reinforcing existing control-paradigm pathways. Yet, water-energy-food-society systems are by nature complex and dynamic, especially under the conditions of climate change. The authors introduce non-equilibrium thinking to the nexus and discuss non-traditional forms of security. They argue that a shift in nexus governance is required towards approaches where limits to control are acknowledged, and more reflexive/plural strategies adopted.
This book will be of interest to academic researchers, policy makers and practitioners in the field of international development studies, envionmental politics, science and technology studies and international relations.
Format: Illustrated
Pages: 150
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 31 Dec 2018
ISBN 10: 0415332834
ISBN 13: 9780415332835