Affiliation:
1. Department of Rural Sociology, Graduate Program of Sociology,
The Holtz Center for Science and Technology Studies, Gaylord Institute for
Environmental Studies, 1450 Linden Dr., Agriculture Hall 350, Madison, WI
53706, USA,
Abstract
For more than five decades, resource scarcity has been the lead story in debates over environmental politics. More importantly, and whenever environmental politics implies conflict, resource scarcity is constructed as the culprit. Abundance of resources, if at all visited in the literature, holds less importance. Resource abundance is seen, at best, as the other side of scarcity — maybe the successful conclusion of multiple interventions that may turn scarcity into abundance. This paper reinstates abundance as a politico-environmental category in its own right. Rather than relegating abundance to a second-order environmental actor that matters only on occasion, this paper foregrounds it as a crucial element in modern environmental politics. On the substantive level, and using insights from science and technology studies, especially a slightly modified actor-network framework, I describe the emergence and consolidation of a Zionist network of abundance, immigration, and colonization in Palestine between 1918 and 1948. The essential argument here is that water abundance was constructed as fact, and became a political rallying point around which a techno-political network emerged that included a great number of elements. To name just a few, the following were enrolled in the service of such a network: geologists, geophysicists, Zionist settlement experts, Zionist organizations, political and technical categories of all sorts, Palestinians as the negated others, Palestinian revolts in search of political rights, the British Mandate authorities, the hydrological system of Palestine, and the absorptive capacity of Palestine, among others. The point was to successfully articulate these disparate elements into a network that seeks opening Palestine for Jewish immigration, redefining Palestinian geography and history through Judeo-Christian Biblical narratives, and, in the process, de-legitimizing political Palestinian presence in historic Palestine.
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,General Social Sciences,History
Reference83 articles.
1. Alatout, Samer (2000) `Water Balances in Palestine, Regional Cooperation, and the Politics of Numbers', in David B. Brooks & Ozay Mehmet (eds), Water Balances in the Eastern Mediterranean (Ottawa : International Development Research Centre): 59-84.
2. Towards a bio-territorial conception of power: Territory, population, and environmental narratives in Palestine and Israel
3. Alatout, Samer (2007a) `From Water Abundance to Water Scarcity: A "Fluid" History of Jewish Subjectivity in Israel and Historic Palestine', in Sandy Sufian & Mark LeVine (eds), Reapproaching Borders: New Perspectives on the Study of Israel-Palestine (New York: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers): 199-219.
4. ‘States’ of Scarcity: Water, Space, and Identity Politics in Israel, 1948–59
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