"Water for All beautifully illustrates the relevance and the power of history as a discipline. It should be of interest to historians of Bolivia and anyone else interested in unearthing the long roots of Latin American discontent that still justify much of the political struggle in the region today."
— H-Net Reviews
"Hines masterfully illuminates the historical roots of grassroots water mobilization."
— Hispanic American Historical Review
"More than land, Cochabamba's water––its glacial mountain lakes, river water, and aquifers––has been the most precious and conflict-riven resource since Inca times. Half a millennium later, the epic struggle exploded in the famous Water War of 1999-2000, marking the collapse of Bolivia's neoliberal regime and its scheme to deliver water-for-profit to a foreign corporation. Yet, as Sarah Hines's magnificent history reveals, the fight for the right to water was the wellspring of popular mobilizations, revolutionary state policy, and escalating urban/rural tensions across the entire 20th century. In the end, Hines's narrative takes a surprisingly hopeful turn. She shows how rural communities, urban barrios, labor and women's associations began to exert everyday forms of control over fair access to scarce water. Beautifully written, deeply researched, and more timely than ever (as the Andes' glacial melt accelerates), this book promises to be an instant landmark of social and environmental history."––Brooke Larson, author of Trials of National Making: Liberalism, Race, and Ethnicity in the Andes, 1810-1910
"Long before the 'Cochabamba Water War of 2000,' periodic conflicts erupted over hydrological resources in this Bolivian city. Water for All reveals the long and sometimes surprising history of how competition for water structured its social, political, and economic life. This book will become required reading for those interested in the past and potential future of resource competition in rapidly urbanizing landscapes in the developing world."––Christopher Boyer, Dean of the College of Arts and Letters, Northern Arizona University
"Water for All is a fascinating history that ought to be read by anyone interested in Latin American politics and history. Sarah Hines's masterfully written book explores the Water War in Cochabamba (2000) and considers the deep legacy of the 1952 revolution in recent Bolivian politics in that event."––Jose M. Gordillo, Assistant Professor of History, University of Calgary.
"Sarah Hines's regional historical approach gives us an entirely new and far deeper understanding of the Water War in Cochabamba, a cause célèbre in the international movement against neoliberal globalization at the turn of the twenty-first century." ––Sinclair Thomson, co-editor of The Bolivia Reader: History, Culture, Politics.
"Based on extensive primary research, Water for All deftly blurs the analytical boundaries between rural and urban histories on one hand and environmental and technological histories on the other hand, showing how modernity comes from the bottom up as well as the top down."—Mikael D. Wolfe, author of Watering the Revolution: An Environmental and Technological History of Agrarian Reform in Mexico
"Water for All shows that the human struggle for life-giving resources does not inevitably lead to violence and domination. As climate disruption intensifies competition for water, Cochabamba's story reminds us that humans are also capable of building equitable and sustainable water systems."—Kevin Young, author of Blood of the Earth: Resource Nationalism, Revolution, and Empire in Bolivia