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Title: | Engineering as Tinkering Care: A Rainwater Harvesting Infrastructure in Cochabamba, Bolivia | Authors: | Stefano Archidiacono Jeltsje Sanne Kemerink-Seyoum Irene Leonardelli Carolina Dominguez Guzman Tavengwa Chitata Margreet Zwarteveen NGO Centro di Volontariato Internazionale, CeVI, Udine, Italy IHE Delft Institute for Water Education, Delft, Netherlands;c Governance and Inclusive Development Group at the University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands IHE Delft Institute for Water Education, Delft, Netherlands;c Governance and Inclusive Development Group at the University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands Governance and Inclusive Development Group at the University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands Department of Geography, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK; Department of Land and Water Resources Management, Midlands State University, Gweru, Zimbabwe IHE Delft Institute for Water Education, Delft, Netherlands;c Governance and Inclusive Development Group at the University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Keywords: | Rainwater harvesting engineering water infrastructure care Cochabamba |
Issue Date: | 17-Jan-2024 | Publisher: | Taylor and Francis Group | Abstract: | In this article, we show how a rainwater harvesting system is made to work. Located at a school in the rural outskirts of Cochabamba, Bolivia, the performance of the system depends on ongoing forms of sociotechnical tinkering: it works well because of the continuous fine-tuning, adaptations, negotiations, and adjustments that people engage in. Acknowledging this hinges on accepting that infrastructures are more fragile, emergent, and contingent than is normally allowed for in engineering textbooks. The language people mobilize to explain their acts of tinkering is also different from how engineers express what they do: they talk about care and caring – care for each other, for their children, for plants – and emphasize reciprocal responsibilities and collective concerns. For them, making water flow is not just about meeting goals of productivity and efficiency, but also about restoring and sustaining the infrastructure itself as well as the relations it supports and makes possible. It is a way of talking that expresses concerns of sustainability and justice. Our conclusion from studying this rainwater harvesting system is that there is merit in expanding and complementing prevailing notions of engineering as optimizing forms of control, with theorizations of engineering as forms of tinkering care. | URI: | https://cris.library.msu.ac.zw//handle/11408/6276 |
Appears in Collections: | Research Papers |
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Engineering as Tinkering Care.pdf | Abstract | 58.07 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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