Water Scarcity and the Production of Urban Space in Shimla
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IISER Mohali
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Abstract
This thesis focuses on the multiple lives of water in Shimla and shows how water and
urban space co-produce each other. It maps the spatial and sociopolitical relationships that are
central to the production and maintenance of the discourse around scarcity. The thesis argues
that institutional restructuring at the local level is intended to create ’world-class city'
narratives such as 24*7 water supply instead of dealing with water availability issues, thereby
keeping the true essence of decentralization in abeyance.
A key contribution of this research is the analytical framework for understanding the
politics surrounding water scarcity. I bring together literature from urban political ecology,
citizenship and infrastructure studies to understand the trickles and surges of water flow in
the mountain town of Shimla. How is water scarcity linked with the production of urban
space, citizenship, and infrastructure? The study shows that the crisis is not just an event with
a definite period. Instead, it has roots in the past and in the imagination of future. The issue of
water availability needs to be seen beyond technological solutionism and involve a broader
discursive understanding of water availability by bringing people back into the analysis. The
research included approximately six months of field work and extensive archival research in
Shimla to understand the city's past, present and future trajectories. Drawing upon my
ethnographic observations during the 2018 water crisis and a textual analysis of interviews
and newspaper archives, I have mapped institutional and discursive changes around water
scarcity in Shimla. Each chapter takes as its entry point a different aspect of water scarcity in
the city, from the production of the urban space to claims on the city and the politics over the
control of the urban space.