Making sense of policy processes in India requires an understanding of how particular ways of thinking about water have gained ascendancy in national and state discourses, and how they have determined the frame through which water is perceived, defined and handled. The way in which the concept of water is framed has important implications for the ways in which water reform policies come to be shaped. Shifting narratives of the causes and solutions to water issues in a neoliberal India both drive and produce policy processes, making available or constraining policy choices in which different forms of water knowledge can be available and mobilized. Using methods of critical discourse analysis, this paper uses the Delhi Water Reform Project as a basis for understanding how power and knowledge define spaces of engagement among a range of positioned actors like the World Bank, the Government of Delhi, and civil society. It argues that their strategies are constructed in a way that permits intervention in a manner so as to promote a particular kind of technical and managerial approach that lends persuasiveness to policy instruments.
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Research Article|
May 27 2011
The urban water reform project: a critical discourse analysis of the water policy making process in Delhi, India Available to Purchase
Vandana Asthana
1Department of Government 019 Hargreaves, Eastern Washington University, Cheney WA 99004, USA
E-mail: [email protected]
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Water Policy (2011) 13 (6): 769–781.
Article history
Received:
July 14 2010
Accepted:
February 23 2011
Citation
Vandana Asthana; The urban water reform project: a critical discourse analysis of the water policy making process in Delhi, India. Water Policy 1 December 2011; 13 (6): 769–781. doi: https://doi.org/10.2166/wp.2011.076
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