Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10646/4078
Title: Water and the environment in southern Africa: A review of the literature since 1990.
Authors: Nyandoro, Mark
nyandoromark@gmail.com
Keywords: water
water pollution
environment
hydro-politics
rural and urban water
irrigation
agriculture
conservation
water rights
water governance
water historiography
Southern Africa
Issue Date: 13-Nov-2019
Publisher: AOSIS (African Online Scientific Information Systems)
Citation: Nyandoro, M., 2019, ‘Water and the environment in southern Africa: A review of the literature since 1990’. The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa 15(1), a679. https://doi.org/10.4102/td.v15i1.679
Abstract: This article is a review of the dominant literature on water issues, water rights and the environment in southern Africa. Being the first in a series of reviews of different regions, it is framed through a survey of national literature that has emerged since the 1990s, with a particular focus on South Africa, Zimbabwe and Botswana. Its central objective and/or purpose is to review select publications in which I foreground significant historiographical tendencies as they relate to my topic on water and the environment. The major tendencies or trends define the content of the article about these countries that form an important part of the SADC region. It traces how water history (a subdivision of environmental history) in southern Africa has developed and evolved, and outlines how scholarly debates have changed over time. To achieve this, I track the major themes of water-history focusing on who produced the works cited, when were they produced, and critically surveying their tenors, themes or intention. What motivated this write-up and assessment of the source material is that several works on this topic have been produced by multiple scholars from diverse academic disciplines: water experts and/or practitioners, ecologists and/or environmentalists, historians, economists, social scientists, hydrologists and policy makers. But not much work has been conducted in the social sciences domain to highlight major water rights and environmental benchmarks from an economic history perspective – a perspective that combines the social and economic analysis of events without disregarding the impact of politics on life and society.
Description: Post-print article
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10646/4078
ISSN: 2415-2005
Appears in Collections:Economic History Staff Publications

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