Unsettled Waters. Eric P. Perramond

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Unsettled Waters - Eric P. Perramond Critical Environments: Nature, Science, and Politics

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I soon found myself, like Alice in Wonderland falling into the rabbit hole, swept into the dizzying maze of adjudication.

      Part of me wishes the A word had remained distant and foreign to me because of its complexity and its reach into all aspects of water. Nevertheless, I found it too fascinating and revealing to ignore. These water adjudication lawsuits expose everything that is strange and contentious about western water law and water use: disagreements over use, local and expert knowledge contests, competing legal notions of water, the allocation of water rights by crop, arguments about water’s purpose, and interstate disputes over water.

      Under the 1907 water code, water abruptly became a state-owned yet privately allocated resource. Adjudication was the process by which the state would translate water access to a private-use right. In some cases, adjudications went smoothly and quickly. These were typically in sparsely populated areas with little water to allocate. More typically, however, the legal process has been adversarial, costly, and lengthy. Multiple generations of families have been embroiled in the same adjudication lawsuit, and the most difficult and massive water cases have not even started yet. Water cultures in New Mexico, like the Hispano irrigators or Native sovereign nations who think in more collective, not individual, water terms, contested the state’s rereading of their water norms and customary understandings of the purpose of water.3

      Allocating small and big water shares will be an increasing challenge in this drier, warmer, more contentious century. Hector knows this, and so does the state engineer, but they think about water in different ways and at different scales. Scholars have recognized the importance of adjudications. Earlier contributions in a 1990 special issue of the Journal of the Southwest highlighted the problematic social tensions of adjudication as a process.4 Those concerns remain thirty years later. Ten years ago, in an interview by Jack Loeffler, Frances Levine wrote, “No contemporary issue is as emblematic of the struggle between traditional and modern lifeways as the water rights adjudications currently under way in much of New Mexico.”5

      In the field of critical legal studies, scholars have demonstrated that multiple customary and formal legal traditions can coexist in the same space. New Mexico represents such a case where competing worldviews and customary traditions of water use endure to this day.6 Legal scholars have assessed and critiqued various state approaches to water adjudication, often focusing on the expense, the lengthiness, and the legal dilemmas. These works were aimed primarily at audiences of water law professionals.7 In addition, work by social scientists has addressed the impact of changes to water governance, water privatization, and the urbanization and commoditization of water.8 Water infrastructure, changes in water law, and federal Indian water policies in the American West have also been well documented.9 Historians too have provided rich accounts of the transformation of the American West’s rivers, the impacts of large-scale irrigation and dams, and the movement of water to cities.

      Unsettled Waters fills an unexplored space in the water literature, focusing on lived experiences of New Mexicans. I critically examine how adjudications affect water users, how they create new forms of water expertise, and also how they might be useful in addressing twenty-first-century water challenges. Adjudication spans generations, is ongoing, and has no end in sight. As I hope will be clear, adjudication has consequences, intended and unintended, for all water users. Here I focus on how the state translates and transforms water from a shared, necessary communal good into a singular resource to be owned by individuals.10 From a theoretical stance, tracking adjudication allows us to examine how a state “sees” water and attempts to redefine its new water citizens as property holders. Adjudication transforms water into a private-use right through law, a system under which water becomes a potential commodity.11

      COLLECTING NEW NARRATIVES OF ADJUDICATION

      Unsettled Waters is based on a mixed-methods approach combining archival, field, and ethnographic research. Between 2006 and 2017, I conducted 274 interviews. Of these, 211 were of rural irrigators, with a special emphasis on those who belong to acequias or are in irrigation districts where acequias are present.12 Local expertise preexisted the rise of disciplinary water “experts” (attorneys, engineers, etc.). I did not focus on a single basin or valley. Rather, I interviewed water users from basins around the state to get a fuller picture of this statewide process (see map 1).

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      I also interviewed sixty-three lawyers, engineers, historians, technicians, and water managers who were working for state agencies and in private industry. I included these informants because no single body of water users can claim a monopoly on understanding water problems, much less solving them. These water “professionals” also provide balance against an overly localized and nostalgic view of water in the Southwest.13

      Because this is a book that depends on the views and perspectives of living New Mexicans, informant names are pseudonyms. A few interviewees wanted to be recognized by their real names, and I honored their requests. In some instances, I modified characteristics of the person depicted or quoted to disguise the source of information. I did not want to betray the confidences of those who shared sensitive, personal, or ditch-wide perspectives. When real names were published in the public record and legal documents, I used those real names. None of those cited, mentioned, or acknowledged bear any responsibility for misinterpretations of fact, fiction, or their own words. The views and voices herein reflect the concerns, thoughts, and constructive critiques of adjudications by New Mexicans.

      Each of the interviews, stories, or accounts in this book has deep historical roots. Legal and historical archives were consulted and used to enrich my accounts of past adjudications, since many of these court cases have lasted through two or more generations of New Mexicans. Archival records were vital supplements to the gaps of peoples’ memories as they recounted their court experiences.14 Adjudication relies on court decrees and data, hydrographic surveys, maps, and charts. I consulted these resources in interpreting the regional cases that appear later in this book. The maps themselves, often dating back to the days of hand-drawn ink on linen, are gorgeous objects left behind by the technicians doing the field mapping. However, numbers and maps alone cannot provide a full picture of the process or its effects on those involved. Since the state, hydrologists, and other experts already track quantitative aspects of adjudication and state knowledge, this book focuses on the qualitative and cultural impacts of an unfinished process.

      Listening to those affected by the process reveals how water users have questioned and contested the state’s simplified reading of water as property. Following Freyfogle’s treatment, private property has always been a contingent relationship, not a solid and identifiable “object” of property.15 Water is owned by each state as a public good, but the use rights are private and dispensed to individuals by the state. Water rights are especially contingent since they depend on state-driven framings of water as a public good and an actual supply of water to use. Water itself in the West is thus a hybrid good: publically owned yet privately dispensed for use as a property right to use. This critical ethnography of water adjudication holds implications for those affected by the process, the state agencies and individuals doing the work, and those who have yet to be visited and adjudicated by the state.16

      GOALS AND ORGANIZATION OF UNSETTLED WATERS

      This is a hybrid text that uses the pragmatic lessons from New Mexican water users and experts and draws on insights from scholarship on water issues. I have intentionally written this as a kind of public political ecology, with

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