CONGRATS TO EDGES MEMBER EVELYN ARRIAGADA ON THE COMPLETION OF HER PHD IN RES!!

EDGES member Evelyn Arriagada has successfully completed her PhD degree from UBC’s Institute for Resources, Environment, and Sustainability! Her PhD thesis is titled “Performing gender through contested waters: Women+ water activists in Chilean hydrosocial struggles.

PhD Thesis Abstract: A vast literature – cross-cutting fields such as Environmental Sociology, Environmental Justice, and Political Ecology – explains women’s differentiated participation in water/environmental-related collective actions. Many common explanations use binary (male/female) socio-demographic variables and/or focus on traditional gender roles (e.g., as mothers, or as caretakers) as the primary explanatory factors. Although contemporary feminist scholars propose that gender is a fluid category that interacts with other axes of social difference to (also) co-produce changing environments, few studies have tried to understand how activism redefines gendered (intersectional and expanded) identities/subjectivities and also critically refashions meanings of/relationships with water and territories. In critical dialogue with those discussions, this research presents the results of my collaborative work with/within the Asamblea de Mujeres Insulares por las Aguas (AMIPA) – a women’s organization in defense of waters in the Chiloe archipelago (southern Chile). I focus on the Chilean case, aiming to understand women+’s engagements as a critical factor mediating the relationship between gender, power, and natures. I particularly ask: how, through activism, do AMIPA members reproduce/transform their gendered+ subjectivities, their connections with waters/territories/natures, and broader (water-related) contentious politics at different scales? Theoretically, I draw upon a Feminist Political Ecology (FPE) approach, emphasizing recent theoretical and praxis-oriented contributions from Latin America, in dialogue with social movements theory (SMT), broader political ecologies of water (POW), and other perspectives. By employing multi-sited ethnography, biographical interviews, activist-research and other methods during a three-year process of accompanying AMIPA, I analyze women+’s multiple experiences of (water) activism and the trajectory of AMIPA to particularly understand how they are challenging, re-signifying or transforming: 1) their senses of the self (Chapter 2); 2) the relationship between complex senses of ‘we’ and situated water activism (Chapter 3); 3) the ways of relating with and re-imagining (extended and embodied) hydrosocial territories and more-than-human watery beings (Chapter 4). These results highlight AMIPA’s situated feminist praxis and our collaborative work to offer a more nuanced approach to gendered+ water/environmental activism and ongoing discussions on the so-called new water justice movements (NWJMs), while enriching FPE and ally approaches on the relationship between shifting/expanded subjectivities, changing natures and co-production of knowledge.

To view Evelyn’s PhD thesis, click here. To watch a clip from Evelyn’s graduation, click here!

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