Abstract
The expansion of the Totora Khocha dam-based irrigation system in the Pucara watershed is a case of planned re-engineering of a closing watershed. This article shows how, when irrigation systems expand in space and across boundaries to capture new water, they also involve new claims by existing and emergent users. This results in complex processes of design, contestation and negotiated redesign, where irrigation projects are being produced by the negotiated construction of water networks. Therefore, the design process in a closing watershed is better approached as a dynamic and negotiated process of engineering than as a prescriptive mode of network building.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Directorate General for International Cooperation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Netherlands, through the programme CONCERTACION (Interdisciplinary Research and Capacity Building on Water Management and Policies in Andean Countries).