6533b835fe1ef96bd12a0147
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Farmers’ autonomous management or state regulation? The consolidation of local irrigation associations in Spain (nineteenth to twentieth centuries)
Salvador Calatayud GinerFrancesco D'amarosubject
HistoryIrrigation050204 development studiesmedia_common.quotation_subjectState water policiesGeography Planning and DevelopmentCollective actionLocal irrigation associations060104 historyPoliticsConsolidation (business)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Political science0502 economics and business0601 history and archaeologyCollective actionmedia_common05 social sciencesAuthoritarianism06 humanities and the artsUrban StudiesWater resourcesAgrarian societySpanish farmersPolitical economyAutonomydescription
AbstractThe collective management of irrigation is an essential factor in agrarian development, both present and past. However, the relationship of irrigation associations with the state remains underexplored, despite the increasingly important role played by water policies in the modern world. The present article examines this relationship in Spain over the last two centuries. Our results suggest that, first, the state played a decisive part in the emergence and evolution of irrigation associations, and this belies the assumption of the traditional origin of these institutions; second, that farmers, despite being subject to the regulatory framework, enjoyed substantial autonomy in the management of water resources; and, third, that the relationship between local associations and the state changed over time, in response to political regime changes and the transformation of irrigation agriculture. When the state tried to impose authoritarian policies upon irrigation users, these reacted by developing unprecedented forms of organisation.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-09-12 |