[w/ apologies for x-posts]

FYI, a newly published special issue of *Society & Natural Resources*, of
possible interest... Kind regards, DS


***

For Immediate Release
News from Routledge
March 2016


*Consider the Hydrological & Social Together: Thinking Relationships
through Water*

*Society & Natural Resources*
<http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/usnr20/current> proudly announces the
publication of a special issue on *Thinking Relationships through Water*
<http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08941920.2016.1151714>. Water,
a vital element in virtually every aspect of life, is constantly contested.
Whether conflicts around water are political, social, spiritual, or
environmental, a deeper understanding of the relationship between humankind
and one of our most fundamental resources is a necessity. For a limited
time, the entire special issue can now be accessed for FREE at:
*http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/usnr20/29/6
<http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/usnr20/29/6>*. Read, cite, and share this
research today.

These six research articles aim, “to contribute to a more explicitly
relational study of water in society. Water is not just the object of
social relationships, or merely a natural resource on which claims are
made, to which meanings are attached, and over which political conflicts
erupt...Rather than treating water as an *object* of social and cultural
production—something produced through social relationships and imbued with
meaning through cultural schemes—we consider *water as a generative and
agentive co-constituent of relationships and meanings in society*,” write
Guest Editors Franz Krause and Veronica Strang. This collection of articles
covers a diverse range of water issues: urban drinking water in Indian
slums; borehole maintenance in rural Senegal; mains water provision in
Kiribati; flood risk management in England;  threats to an Australian
aquifer; and pollution in a Norwegian fjord. What unites these studies is
their close attention to the social and material relations that direct
water flows, and to the water movements that, in turn, flow through
societal arrangements and cultural imaginaries.

Franz Krause and Veronica Strang remark that, “if we study how social and
hydrological relationships are interconnected and mutually constitutive, a
much deeper understanding of the role of water in human social lives can be
gained, and significantly better management and policy can be designed.”

*FREE ACCESS: Society & Natural Resources Volume 29, Issue 6, 2016*
<http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08941920.2016.1151714>

*Download the entire special issue in PDF format or view in HTML format at
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/usnr20/29/6
<http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/usnr20/29/6>*

*About **Society & Natural Resources* <http://www.tandfonline.com/usnr>

*Society & Natural Resources has a 2014 Impact Factor of 1.284 (©2015
Thomson Reuters, 2014 Journal Citation Reports®)*


*Society & Natural Resources, *official publication of the *International
Association for Society & Natural Resources* *(www.iasnr.org
<http://www.iasnr.org>)*, publishes a broad range of social science
research and thinking on the interaction of social and bio-physical
processes, policies and practices occurring around the world and at
multiple scales.  These involve attention to cultural, psychological,
economic and political perspectives relating to forests, oceans, fisheries,
soils, and water; and address a variety of topics such as people and
protected areas/biodiversity conservation, globalization and capitalism,
environmental justice, place/community-based conservation, community
resilience, adaptive and collaborative management, sustainability, climate
change, environmental attitudes and concerns, environmental hazards and
risks, and human-nature relationships.  Papers published in *Society &
Natural Resources* go through a double-blind, peer review process and meet
standards of contributing significantly to theory and/or transformative
policies and practices, offering scholarly depth but broad appeal to our
diverse readership.



*About Routledge, a Member of the Taylor & Francis Group*

*www.tandfonline.com* <http://www.tandfonline.com/>

Taylor & Francis Group partners with researchers, scholarly societies,
universities and libraries worldwide to bring knowledge to life. As one of
the world’s leading publishers of scholarly journals, books, ebooks and
reference works our content spans all areas of Humanities, Social Sciences,
Behavioural Sciences, Science, and Technology and Medicine.

*Media Contact - *For more information please contact: Caitlin
Sheeder-Borrelli, Journals Marketing Assistant, Taylor & Francis, 530
Walnut Street Suite 850, Philadelphia, PA 19106, Tel: (215) 606-4338,
*[email protected]*
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