Conflicts over water are human-caused events with socio-political and economic causes. From the Movement of People Against Dams in Brazil to environmental activists in Pittsburgh, people are coming together to fight for control of their water. Global solidarities against water grabbing examines how movements are communicating and organizing against water privatization and other forms of water grabbing, and explores how movements engage with and learn from each other. Exploring major conflicts over water, the book illustrates how race, class, gender, sex and geographic location intersect in these moments of contestation. It observes the multi-scalar dimensions of social movements and campaigns fighting against water privatization as part of a larger project of contesting capitalism. It also sheds light on the mechanisms of power, envisioning alternative social structures, and emphasizing the significance of education and organization in fostering counter-hegemonic movements. Drawing on political economy, feminist and decolonial/anticolonial research methods, and social movement studies amongst others, this multidisciplinary work allows us to imagine alternatives beyond capitalism, and is relevant to both critical academics and activists alike. It allows activists and researchers to understand the locality of any concrete act of resistance against capitalist exploitation, while comprehending that the wider pressures of exploitation have a global structural source. In turn, this underpins the formation of transnational bonds of solidarity between different people across various campaigns.
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