Centre for Water and Development

Overview

The Centre for Water and Development provides a forum for interdisciplinary and comparative research relating to water governance and resource management across the School as well as externally. 

The Group engages in:

  • Research: collaborative, interdisciplinary research on water resources and development within SOAS and with UK, European and global partners.
  • Education: strengthen and expand water resources related education at SOAS, including distance learning.
  • Partnerships and capacity building: undertake joint projects with academic and NGO partners in Africa, Asia and Europe, and develop proposals in response to expressed needs of practitioners/water professionals.
  • Public debate: enhance informed, critical debate on water resources and development.

The Centre for Water and Development (CWD) is engaged in multiple strands of work: In the UK, members have been engaged in interdisciplinary research on the water and sewerage sector in England and Wales for over a decade. Initially under the EU-funded FESSUD project, research focused on the financialisation of water in England, uncovering the complex financial structures of some of the water companies. Subsequent research explored the material cultures that sustain the financialised structures of the English water system. 

We have also written about the regulation of financialised infrastructure in England. We have an interdisciplinary approach, combining economics and anthropology in our study of London’s Thames Tideway ‘Super Sewer’. CWD’s written evidence has been cited in UK government enquiries, by the House of Commons and the House of Lords.

CWD currently co-hosts the European Research Council (ERC) project: Addressing the Multi-scalar Dimensions of Sectoral Water Conflicts: Lessons from South Asia (WATCON).

Research

The Centre for Water and Development undertakes research in various areas of environmental law of contemporary relevance. The centre's research focuses in particular on topics of relevance to the South and to North-South relations.

 

Contact

Phillipe Cullet 

pcullet@soas.ac.uk

020 7898 4651

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