scholarly journals Irrigation Infrastructure in Fergana Today: Ecological Implications – Economic Necessities

Author(s):  
Shavkat Kenjabaev ◽  
Hans-Georg Frede
2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeanmarie Haney ◽  
Dale Turner ◽  
Vashti Supplee

2009 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 245-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juliana Jaramillo ◽  
Adenirin Chabi-Olaye ◽  
Christian Borgemeister ◽  
Charles Kamonjo ◽  
Hans-Michael Poehling ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 251484862110268
Author(s):  
Jean-Philippe Venot ◽  
Casper B Jensen

In Khmer, the word prek designates a connection between things. In Kandal province in Cambodia, preks crisscross the landscape, connecting rivers with floodplains, supporting rich ecologies and a variety of livelihoods. Drawing on science and technology studies (STS) and critical water research, this paper explores prek(s) as a multiplicity. Rather than taking the prek as a passive object around which various practices occur, we examine how prek(s) are enacted as ontologically different: as irrigation infrastructure, as pathway to rice intensification, as device for Cambodian state-making, and as climate-friendly agricultural development. After analyzing interference patterns between enactments and their scale-making effects in- and outside the Mekong floodplains, we make explicit our own ontological politics. Focused on sustaining multiple uses and ecosystems, “our” prek is a socionatural mosaic landscape where many human and more-than-human actors and practices can coexist. This ontological politics, we suggest, has implications for planetary environmental knowledges and delta management far beyond Kandal’s landscape.


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