Conceptualizing Biopolitics: citizen-state interactions in the securing of water services in South Africa

Type Journal Article - Medical Anthropology
Title Conceptualizing Biopolitics: citizen-state interactions in the securing of water services in South Africa
Author(s)
Volume 34
Issue 6
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
Page numbers 533-550
URL https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4640942/
Abstract
Despite constitutional obligations to provide clean water to all citizens in South Africa, access to water and related services remains highly contested. The discord between constitutional promises and lived realities of water access, particularly through national infrastructure, provides a platform upon which to examine Foucauldian notions of biopolitics, the control of populations through technologies of governing. Drawing on the situations of residents in the rural Vhembe district in the north eastern corner of the country, I examine how individuals conceptualize the relationship that exists between citizen and state and the responsibilities of each in post-apartheid South Africa as it relates to water access. In addition, I describe strategies employed throughout South Africa to voice rights to water and how these approaches are perceived. Finally, I consider how the three primary forms of ‘water citizenship’ – citizen, agent, and subject – influence the current and future health of vulnerable residents.

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