White Gold and Thirsty Communities
Auteur : John Aerni-Flessner
Date de publication : 2026-02-27
Éditeur : Lynne Rienner Publishers
Nombre de pages : Non disponible
Résumé du livre
The story of the Lesotho Highlands Water Project (LHWP) is a tale both of international diplomacy and of the ways that high politics and the antiapartheid struggle played out--and continue to play out--in the daily lives of the people of Lesotho and South Africa.
The LHWP is the result of a 1986 treaty between the apartheid regime in Pretoria and the military regime in Maseru. John Aerni-Flessner traces the twenty-year negotiations leading up to the signing of the treaty, assesses how the Cold War and anti-apartheid struggles shaped those negotiations, and considers the effect of global geopolitical battles on the entire process. He also shows that, while the LHWP can by one metric be judged a success--today the project delivers hundreds of millions of cubic meters of "white gold" per year from Lesotho to Gauteng--it is also a failure in that many communities in both countries still lack access to water. These communities are emblematic of the continuing divide between haves and have-nots that existed during the apartheid era and that persist today.
CONTENTS:
- Prologue: Selling Gravity.
- Dreams of Water in Southern Africa.
- The History of the Water Deal and an Independent Foreign Policy for Lesotho, 1966-72.
- Toward Soweto: Southern Africa's Shifting Politics and the Anti-Apartheid Struggle, 1972-76.
- Regional Security and the Project in the Balance, 1976-85.
- 1986: The Lesotho Coup and the Highlands Water Treaty.
- Gravity and Displacement: The LHWP in Action.
- Epilogue: The Botswana Scheme.