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Environment and History 23 (2017): 39–63.
© 2017 The White Horse Press. doi: 10.3197/096734017X14809635325593
Engineering Edens on This ‘Rivered Earth’?
A Review Article on Water Management and Hydro-
Resilience in the British Empire, 1860s–1940s
1
JAMES BEATTIE
History Programme
University of Waikato
Private Bag 3105, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand
Email: jbeattie@waikato.ac.nz
RUTH MORGAN
National Centre for Australian Studies
Monash University
Caulield, VIC, 3145, Australia
Email: ruth.morgan@monash.edu
ABSTRACT
This article presents an overview of the management of fresh water in the
British Empire from the 1860s to the 1940s. We argue that imperial water
management shaped and responded to the imperatives of diverse ecologies
and topographies, contrasting political and economic agendas and, not least,
different colonial societies, technologies and lay expertise. Building on ex-
isting studies, we consider the broader ecological and social effects of water
management on irrigated agriculture and cities as well as water supply and
drainage, with a particular focus on India and Australasia. Although imperial
ideologies of improvement impelled settlement, drove resource extraction and
transformed environments, we argue that at times they also diminished the
availability, quality and distribution of water. Engineering projects also ben-
eited some groups but not others. We show that normative Anglo assumptions
of productive lands and watered environments were often ill-matched with
colonial ecologies and water availability, in some cases prompting anxieties
about the quality and quantity of water. While these anxieties encouraged fur-
ther hydrological interventions, we show that they often had unexpected and
undesired consequences. We introduce the concept of ‘hydro-resilience’ to
demonstrate how interventions in water management diminished the quality
1. Vikram Seth, The Rivered Earth (New Delhi: Hamish Hamilton, 2011).