Structural impediments to sustainable groundwater management in the High Plains Aquifer of western Kansas

被引:0
作者
Matthew R. Sanderson
R. Scott Frey
机构
[1] Kansas State University,Department of Sociology
[2] University of Tennessee,Department of Sociology
来源
Agriculture and Human Values | 2015年 / 32卷
关键词
High Plains; Ogallala; Water; Agriculture; Development; Environment; Metabolic rift; Ecological unequal exchange;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Western Kansas is one of the most important agricultural regions in the world. Most agricultural production in this semi-arid region depends on the consumption of nonrenewable groundwater from the High Plains Aquifer, which will be 70 % depleted by 2070. The problem of depletion has drawn significant attention from local citizens and policymakers at the federal, state, and local levels for at least 40 years, resulting in a variety of policies and institutions to manage groundwater from the aquifer as a common pool resource. Yet depletion has persisted. We explain this conundrum as an outcome of a mismatch between the scale of resource management, which has become more intensively local, and the scale of resource exchange, which has rendered the High Plains Aquifer a global common pool resource. We then explain the deeper, structural origins of the management–exchange scale mismatch. Drawing on concepts from structural human ecology theory and empirical evidence from Southwest Kansas, we show that agriculture is predicated on local metabolic rift in the hydrological cycle that is exacerbated through ecological unequal exchange with higher-income, core areas beyond the region. We conclude by highlighting two key policies that, if implemented together, may lessen the deleterious effects of these structural dynamics and thus promote a more sustainable relationship between society and environment in this region and other water-scarce regions that are net-exporters of groundwater.
引用
收藏
页码:401 / 417
页数:16
相关论文
共 51 条
  • [1] Allan JA(1998)Virtual water: A strategic resource, global solutions to regional deficits Ground Water 36 545-546
  • [2] Andersson JO(2001)Ecologically unsustainable trade Ecological Economics 37 113-122
  • [3] Lindroth M(1984)Modes of extraction, unequal exchange, and the progressive underdevelopment of an extreme periphery: The Brazilian Amazon American Journal of Sociology 89 1017-1064
  • [4] Bunker SG(2005)How ecologically uneven developments put the spin on the treadmill of production Organization and Environment 18 38-54
  • [5] Bunker SG(2003)The struggle to govern the commons Science 302 1907-1912
  • [6] Dietz T(1998)Society’s metabolism: The intellectual history of material flow analysis, 1860–1970 Journal of Industrial Ecology 2 7-47
  • [7] Ostrom E(2001)Beyond IPAT and Kuznets curves: Globalization as a vital factor in analyzing environmental impact of socioeconomic metabolism Population and Environment 23 61-78
  • [8] Stern PC(1999)Marx’s theory of metabolic rift: Classical foundations for environmental sociology American Journal of Sociology 105 366-405
  • [9] Fischer-Kowalski M(2008)Agricultural transitions in the context of growing environmental pressure over water Agriculture and Human Values 25 469-486
  • [10] Fischer-Kowalski M(2009)Global groundwater? Issues and solutions Annual Review of Environment and Resources 34 153-178