Communities as the agents of commodification: The Kumbo Water Authority in Northwest Cameroon |
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Authors: | Ben Page |
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Affiliation: | Department of Geography, UCL, 26 Bedford Way, London WC1H 0AP, UK |
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Abstract: | In 1991 the people of the town of Kumbo in Northwest Cameroon expelled the national water corporation from town by force. They claimed to be retrieving a network that the community rightfully owned and they began to run the system along community lines. The paper tells the story of that water supply twice. First it reproduces the popular accounts that circulated in the 1990s that emphasize the role played by the community in the development and operation of the water supply and portray recent events as a triumph of community management. Then it retells the story using archive evidence that puts a quite different light on some of the events. It is argued that the emphasis on community management has a tendency to obscure other important aspects of the story, for example its political context and consequences. It is suggested that the widespread admiration for any initiative that is community based often results in an uncritical analysis of this form of development project. In this case the commodification of water accelerates after the community has wrested control of this public service from the state. |
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Keywords: | Cameroon Community development Water supply |
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