Hydraulic bricolages: coexisting water supply and access regimes in N’Djamena, Chad

This article investigates the ambivalent interconnectedness of water supply regimes of N’Djamena, the Chadian capital. Multiple water supply regimes coexist in N’Djamena and produce what I termed “hydraulic bricolages”. The article documents daily activities of the Technical Directorate of the Socié...

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Main Author: Ismaël Maazaz
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Pôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information Géographique 2024-03-01
Series:EchoGéo
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/22514
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author Ismaël Maazaz
author_facet Ismaël Maazaz
author_sort Ismaël Maazaz
collection DOAJ
description This article investigates the ambivalent interconnectedness of water supply regimes of N’Djamena, the Chadian capital. Multiple water supply regimes coexist in N’Djamena and produce what I termed “hydraulic bricolages”. The article documents daily activities of the Technical Directorate of the Société Tchadienne des Eaux (Chad’s water national company, STE), insisting on limited available means and improvising methods that characterise hydraulic bricolages. The article then turns to alternative regimes, notably based on (cheap) water hand pumps and (costly) private boreholes. It qualifies the notion of “competing” sociotechnical regimes and stresses patterns of coexistence.
format Article
id doaj-art-a34f621ce26f4f549e1b28314745e341
institution Kabale University
issn 1963-1197
language fra
publishDate 2024-03-01
publisher Pôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information Géographique
record_format Article
series EchoGéo
spelling doaj-art-a34f621ce26f4f549e1b28314745e3412025-01-30T12:44:34ZfraPôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information GéographiqueEchoGéo1963-11972024-03-015710.4000/echogeo.22514Hydraulic bricolages: coexisting water supply and access regimes in N’Djamena, ChadIsmaël MaazazThis article investigates the ambivalent interconnectedness of water supply regimes of N’Djamena, the Chadian capital. Multiple water supply regimes coexist in N’Djamena and produce what I termed “hydraulic bricolages”. The article documents daily activities of the Technical Directorate of the Société Tchadienne des Eaux (Chad’s water national company, STE), insisting on limited available means and improvising methods that characterise hydraulic bricolages. The article then turns to alternative regimes, notably based on (cheap) water hand pumps and (costly) private boreholes. It qualifies the notion of “competing” sociotechnical regimes and stresses patterns of coexistence.https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/22514Chadurban studieswater regimebricolageinfrastructure
spellingShingle Ismaël Maazaz
Hydraulic bricolages: coexisting water supply and access regimes in N’Djamena, Chad
EchoGéo
Chad
urban studies
water regime
bricolage
infrastructure
title Hydraulic bricolages: coexisting water supply and access regimes in N’Djamena, Chad
title_full Hydraulic bricolages: coexisting water supply and access regimes in N’Djamena, Chad
title_fullStr Hydraulic bricolages: coexisting water supply and access regimes in N’Djamena, Chad
title_full_unstemmed Hydraulic bricolages: coexisting water supply and access regimes in N’Djamena, Chad
title_short Hydraulic bricolages: coexisting water supply and access regimes in N’Djamena, Chad
title_sort hydraulic bricolages coexisting water supply and access regimes in n djamena chad
topic Chad
urban studies
water regime
bricolage
infrastructure
url https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/22514
work_keys_str_mv AT ismaelmaazaz hydraulicbricolagescoexistingwatersupplyandaccessregimesinndjamenachad