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Echoes of Cochabamba (Olivera, Oscar)
Echoes of Cochabamba
Untertitel Legacies of the Water Wars in Bolivia
Autor Olivera, Oscar
Verlag Common Notions
Sprache Englisch
Einband Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
Erscheinungsjahr 2025
Seiten 208 S.
Artikelnummer 47336938
ISBN 978-1-945335-29-7
CHF 23.90
Zusammenfassung

Lessons from the greatest people’s victory against corporate neoliberal capture in Latin America.

Water is life! From the frontlines of the greatest popular rebellion against the privatization of water comes the triumphant grassroots story of ordinary people in Cochabamba, Bolivia who became water warriors. As Echoes of Cochabamba shows in vivid detail, the 2001 “water wars” was an explosion of democracy and human rights regained by the masses, which won popular control of water supply and defied all odds by driving out the transnational corporation that had stolen their water in the first place.

Oscar Olivera, a trade union machinist who helped shape and lead a movement that brought thousands of ordinary people to the streets, powerfully conveys the perspective of a committed participant in a victorious and inspirational rebellion.

Olivera relates the selling of the city’s water supply to Aguas del Tunari—a subsidiary of US-based Bechtel—the subsequent astronomical rise in water prices, and the refusal of poverty-strapped Bolivians to pay them. Olivera brings us to the front lines of a movement, chronicling how the people organized an opposition and the dramatic struggles that eventually defeated the privatizers.

With hard-won political savvy, Olivera reflects on major themes that emerged from the war over water: the fear and isolation that Cochabambinos faced with a spirit of solidarity and mutual aid; the challenges of democratically administering the city’s water supply; and the impact of the water wars on subsequent resistance.

Twenty-five years later, Cochabamba teaches us that the real issue is not the capture of state power, but the creation of new pathways from the grassroots up.

Oscar Olivera, then Executive Secretary of the Federation of Factory Workers of Cochabamba, Bolivia (1999), actively participated in creating the Coordinadora de Defensa del Agua y de la Vida, a key organization in the movement against water privatization in Bolivia and Cochabamba in 2000. He is recipient of the Letelier-Moffitt Human Rights Award (2000), the Goldman Environmental Prize (2001), the James Lawson Award for nonviolent activism (2013) as well as numerous recognitions from rural and urban organizations in Bolivia.