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The Texas-Mexico water dispute and its resolution (?): Agricultural liquid and land practice and discourse along the Rio Conchos, Chihuahua, 1990--2005

Posted on:2008-03-31Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of Texas at AustinCandidate:Reed, Cyrus B. HFull Text:PDF
GTID:1446390005463170Subject:Geography
Abstract/Summary:
Between 1992 and 2005, Chihuahua's Rio Conchos outflows were at less than 10 percent of their historical average, prompting a highly public dispute with the U.S. over water quantity under terms of the 1944 U.S.-Mexico Water Treaty. Still, Mexico made a number of water "payments" and achieved an eventual resolution of the dispute. The resolution focused on a number of steps, including investing over ;Utilizing a case study approach rooted in political and cultural ecology, the research examines the factors---from drought to land use change---purported by different interest groups as contributing to the transboundary Texas-Mexico water dispute and finds at least three major "narratives" emerged in the period to explain the low flows, including drought, dam management and agricultural expansion and land use changes. The dissertation shows, however, that the reduced outflows and reductions in "dam" water to farmers was just one factor in a changing agricultural context in which new land tenure rules, decentralization of water management and the enactment of a more open economic framework precipitated resource use changes within the agricultural areas.;In addition, the dissertation examines water and land resource use, including conservation projects, in three specific agricultural areas, and finds significant transformations in markets, policies and climate. Farmers were not just passive victims of reduced water use, the curtailment of government programs, and "privatization" of land and water resources, but adopted alternative water source strategies, began to examine more "conservationist-minded" agricultural practices and shifted cultivation to higher yield crops. Still, many farmers chose to abandon agriculture altogether, as there was some consolidation of resources among wealthier farmers.;The "transnationalization" of the Rio Conchos which has resulted from the new focus on its water users may influence local decision-making, but the research contends that resource management decisions in the Rio Conchos Watershed are influenced and determined by local practices and environments as well as by economic and legal changes brought about by Mexico's inclusion into a globalized economy.
Keywords/Search Tags:Rio conchos, Water, Agricultural, Land, Dispute, Resolution
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