The Meaning of Water - By Veronica Strang
The Meaning of Water
By Veronica Strang
Published by
Berg
Water is the world’s most valuable resource – and its
most contested.
In The Meaning of Water, Professor Strang
focuses on the River Stour in Dorset to explore the many
different meanings that water holds for people and how this
affects the ways they think about and use water resources.
She looks at how the meanings of water affect people’s relationships with those who own and manage resources and their responses to government policies, and discovers why some describe water privatisation as “the worst thing that ever happened to us”.
The research shows how the cultural meanings of water have major implications for our prospects of achieving sustainable levels of usage.
Strang also explores other factors putting pressure on water supplies; changing climate, rising populations, and agricultural developments leading to ever increasing needs for water.
With NZ’s increasing droughts and floods, its intensifying agriculture and its experiments with water privatisation, Professor Strang’s book offers some timely insights into the issues.
Veronica Strang is the Professor of Anthropology in AUT’s School of Social Science. She holds a BA (Hons) Sheffield, MPhil (Oxford), DPhil (Oxford).
Launch:
When: Wednesday, March
17th,
Where: Old Government House, University of
Auckland Campus
Cnr Princes St and Waterloo
Quadrant
Auckland City
Time:
5:30-7:30pm
Sponsored by
Watercare.