1. Water and technoscientific state formation in California.
- Author
-
Carroll, Patrick
- Subjects
- *
WATER boundaries , *BOUNDARY disputes , *SWAMPS , *GEOPOLITICS , *COMPLEXITY (Philosophy) , *ACTOR-network theory ,CALIFORNIA state history - Abstract
This paper argues that water gradually became, over a period of more than half a century, a critical boundary object between science and governance in California. The paper historicizes ‘water’, and argues that a series of discrete problems that involved water, particularly the reclamation of ‘swampland’ in the Sacramento Valley, gradually came to be viewed as a single ‘water problem’ with many facets. My overarching theoretical aim is to rethink the ontology of the technoscientific state through the tools of actor-network theory. I conclude with the following paradox: the more the technoscientific state forms into a complex gathering – or ‘thing’ – of which humans are part, the more it is represented and perceived as a simplified and singular actor set apart from those same humans. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF