Collecting Ideals
Re-envisioning ejidos as climate actions platformsAdvisors
- Lorena Bello
- Nicholas de Monchaux
- Diane Davis
In "Collecting Ideals: Re-envisioning ejidos as climate-action platforms" I argue that ejidos, have and are still playing a major role in the urbanization and development of more rural settings in Mexico, particularly in regions with small towns. I further argue that ejidal dynamics in such regions have their own peculiarities -- particularly in terms of the potential impacts of ejidal privatization on the natural and built environment -- and thus that urban designers and planners need special tools to manage and guide the impact of ejidal production on urbanization in such settings. More specifically, I hypothesize that ejidos -- which still comprise 52% of Mexico's land -- could play a major role in Mexico's fight to confront climate change in the twenty first century, in a manner that is fair and equitable to its common owners, particularly if the equation of water supply is solved.
To support this claim, my thesis uses mapping as a critical device to first spatialize and visualize the different outcomes of ejido privatization. Using the case of Apan, Hidalgo -- in the Pachuca sub-basin region -- I propose a series of measures to guide ejidal development in quasi-rural settings. After developing the Latourian concept of a critical zone to guide such processes, I propose the development of "common platform" for stakeholder engagement that could help visualize different scenarios and accommodate common interests to ensure water sovereignty for all.