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Deep Water: The Epic Struggle over Dams, Displaced People, and the Environment
 
 
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Deep Water: The Epic Struggle over Dams, Displaced People, and the Environment [Hardcover]

Jacques Leslie (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 28, 2005
"If the wars of the last century were fought over oil, the wars of this century will be fought over water." -Ismail Serageldin, The World Bank

The giant dams of today are the modern Pyramids, colossally expensive edifices that generate monumental amounts of electricity, irrigated water, and environmental and social disaster.

With Deep Water, Jacques Leslie offers a searching account of the current crisis over dams and the world's water. An emerging master of long-form reportage, Leslie makes the crisis vivid through the stories of three distinctive figures: Medha Patkar, an Indian activist who opposes a dam that will displace thousands of people in western India; Thayer Scudder, an American anthropologist who studies the effects of giant dams on the peoples of southern Africa; and Don Blackmore, an Australian water manager who struggles to reverse the effects of drought so as to allow Australia to continue its march to California-like prosperity.

Taking the reader to the sites of controversial dams, Leslie shows why dams are at once the hope of developing nations and a blight on their people and landscape. Deep Water is an incisive, beautifully written, and deeply disquieting report on a conflict that threatens to divide the world in the coming years.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This worthy but difficult book looks at large dams and their consequences through the eyes of three members of the 1990s' World Commission on Dams. Indian activist Medha Patkar planned to drown herself to protest the Sardar Sarovar dam's displacement of several hundred thousand people. Thayer Scudder, a dam resettlement expert and consultant to the World Bank, stopped a dam that would have destroyed Botswana's Okavango Delta. Don Blackmore, in Australia, where dams are a virtual necessity, has to regulate "the dozens of variables that affect the health of a river basin" during an acute drought. Leslie's (The Mark: A War Correspondent's Memoir of Vietnam and Cambodia) intent was to "see dams whole," and he conveys the complex, disheartening issues surrounding them. Whether the reader can see dams whole is another question. Leslie is capable of both punchy and lyrical writing. But with the flood of detail, from the mechanics of dam financing to the water sources for African villages, the book becomes a hard slog. A draft of this unquestionably informative and eye-opening book won the J. Anthony Lukas Work-in-Progress Award, but it will need a devoted reader to get the last drop of good out of it. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

During the twentieth century, 45,000 large dams were built in 140 countries, complicated projects that are now being recognized as major environmental and humanitarian disasters. Add to that the fact that freshwater is the most precious and endangered resource on the planet, and journalist Leslie has chosen one hot topic. His extensive research and demanding journeys to controversial dam sites around the world result in solid documentation of the often-corrupt finances and politics of dam building and the cruelty and injustice of the displacement of (usually) indigenous communities and the submergence of their land. Leslie also offers lucid explanations of how dams cause aridity, erosion, extinction, and pollution. Indelible portraits of three dedicated individuals put a human face on the subject. Medha Patkar, India's leading antidam activist, has put her life at risk to protest the forced displacement of tribal communities. Anthropologist Thayer Scudder is "the world's leading dam resettlement expert." Don Blackmore is devoted to rectifying dam-related problems in Australia. Leslie's edgy, potent, and in-depth inquiry unveils the drastic, unintentional consequences of dams and exposes yet more evidence of the catastrophic results of allowing greed and politics to trump science and justice. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 1st Edition, 2005/ 1st Printing edition (July 28, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0374281726
  • ISBN-13: 978-0374281724
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.5 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,721,137 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Modern View of The Cadillac Desert, November 20, 2005
This review is from: Deep Water: The Epic Struggle over Dams, Displaced People, and the Environment (Hardcover)
In the United States the building of large dams has basically ceased. The failure of the Teton Dam in Idaho and the publication of the seminal book 'The Cadillac Desert' pointed out that the construction of such dams had gone far enough. Of course the fact that most of the best sites had already been used may have had something to do with it.

This book brings the same study to what is going on in other parts of the world, specifically India, Southern Africa and Australia. Each of the three main sections takes on one of these regions from the viewpoint of the dams.

In the epilogue of the book the author finally gets to express his view of the future. A view of the time when the dams are full of sediment, collapsing because of the aging concrete -- as he calls it, the ultimate litter. As he says, the future will look back on the dam building era, the automobile era, our time as an anomoly in the history of the world.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating and Disturbing, April 8, 2010
Jacques Leslie writes detailed reports on the development of major dam systems in India, Southern Africa, and Australia. He examines all aspects of the politics involved in planning and financing these dams through the World Bank. He also describes on how these projects focus only on the main "benefits" of the dams such as irrigation or hydro power to the detriment of everything else including mass resettlement of local (poor) peoples that sound too similar to the constanting shifting of native peoples in the United States to make room for "civilization" and "development." In the process Leslie goes in to significant detail on the history, ecology, anthropology, and economics of these regions. This book should have received five stars, but for glaring omissions of the publisher. There is no index and no list of sources. Leslie is a journalist and this book reads like a series in a magazine. His content is wonderful and should not be missed. However, the editors should have included more detailed maps of the areas being discussed and diagrams or photographs of the dams would also have greatly added to the work (not even the cover photo has anything to do with the dams under discussion). In addition, Leslie had worked with photographers on some of these investigations and photographs of the dams and the areas in question would have been very helpful. Google Earth is a good backup to fill this void, but it seems like the publisher wanted to save money in publishing this book. As a result, Leslie's work is first rate, but the book as a whole has limited usefullness.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good implicit indictment of dams, but could have gone farther, and weak on solutions, September 3, 2007
By 
This book examines the consequences of large dams around the world. Leslie has constructed his book much like John McPhee's classic _Encounters with the Archdruid_. Whereas _Encounters_ had environmentalist David Brower confront three environmental "villains," Leslie simply hangs out with three would-be heroes: an anti-dam activist, a consultant who works on the human consequences of dams, and a water-system manager who is trying to manage the system in an environmentally responsible way.

The first third of the book looks at activist Medha Patkar and her efforts to stop the dam on the Narmada River at Sardar Sarovar. This was the first project the World Bank ever left before it was finished, though it is still being built without Bank support.

The second third examines Thayer Scudder, an anthropologist who got started in the dam business by studying a people in Zambia whose homeland was destroyed by a dam. After this, he was often hired as a consultant on (underfunded) resettlement projects - - someone who could propose remediation in exchange for giving his support. He spent his career searching in vain for a good dam, always optimistic that a properly-managed dam would be good for people. Ironically, his greatest success came in stopping a bad dam at the Okavango Delta, not helping a good one.

The final third of the book looks at Don Blackmore, a water manager who is trying to make Australia's huge Murray-Darling project sustainable.

Like McPhee, Leslie tries to stay in the background and let his three characters speak. Leslie clearly admires the commitment of the anti-dam activists; in contrast, he all but calls Scudder a sell-out. However, it's interesting that he concludes with Blackmore, the most powerful and pragmatic of the three.

Though Leslie doesn't spin it this way, this book provides a "damming" indictment of engineers. They love playing with their toys, and if anything goes wrong they simply blame "politics" or "greed." But Leslie makes clear that, even when a dam helps some people, it comes at the cost of harming a lot of people whose lives are destroyed by the reservoir - - to say nothing of a damaged ecosystem. This means that dams cannot be anything but "political" because the winners will lobby for the dam and the losers will try to stop it. Leslie doesn't examine dam financing but it is equally, and inevitably political: taxpayers (or aid donors) pay for a project that helps some people but not others. Why, exactly, should everyone give money to help only a few?

The book could be used to make a good case for free market environmentalism: if dam builders had to compensate all the people harmed, both upstream and downstream, and pay for the dam out of their own pockets, no dams would be built. They are neither individually profitable nor socially beneficial. They exist only because they benefit wealthy people - - and engineers.

The only question that remains is what we should do with the dams we have. Leslie's Australian hero, Don Blackmore, is struggling with that question. So is Leslie, and that is a major limitation of the book.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
To get to Domkhedi, Medha Patkar's monsoon headquarters, you fly to Bombay, then to Baroda, the second-largest city in the state of Gujarat. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
environmental flows, good dam, dam opponents, healthy river, red gums, working river, water efficiency, bad project, large dams
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
World Bank, New South Wales, Sardar Sarovar, Lake Victoria, South Africa, River Murray, Mitta Mitta, South Australia, Murray-Darling Basin, World Commission, Madhya Pradesh, Nam Theun, Banrock Station, Development Authority, Ministerial Council, Narmada Valley, United States, Supreme Court, Lesotho Highlands, Gwembe Tonga, Medha Patkar, Murray Irrigation, New Mazulu, Okavango Delta, Okavango River
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