LAHORE: LUMS Water Informatics
and Technology (WIT) Centre, in collaboration with the Khwarizmi Science Society (KSS), organised an international seminar on ‘History
and Future of Indus Basin’, discussing the central role of water in shaping the politics, economics
and culture of the Indus Basin
The day-long event hosted talks ranging from an analysis of early water systems in the Mughal period, through the impact of colonial transformations of the Indus Basins irrigation work, to post independence chain of events shaping contemporary water resource governance in the Indus Basin. Participants were informed about the connection between historical interventions in the Basin
and contemporary water issues in transboundary
and interprovincial water governance
Leading international
and national scholars delivered speeches on important historic, geographical, scientific
and political issues around Indus river basin in Pakistan including: Dr David Gilmartin (North Carolina State University), Dr James W
escoat (Massachusettes Institute of Technology), Dr Daanish Mustafa (Kings College London), Dr Adeel Malik (University of Oxford), Dr Imran Ali (Karachi School of Business
and Leadership)
and Khalid Mohtadullah (Global Water Partnership).
The multi-disciplinary symposium hosted over 150 participants including students
and academia as well as water management professio
nals from provincial irrigation
and agricultural department, research organisations
and NGOs.
The symposium also hosted a book launch for Dr David Gilmartin’s book ‘Blood
and Water: The Indus River Basin in Modern History’, which is considered as the most authoritative text on irrigation development in the Indus Basin from the nineteenth century to the present.
According to WIT Director Dr Abubakr Muhammad, “The human transformation of the Indus Basin has allowed engineers to control the nature
and harness its productive resources for development purposes, yet at the same time it does not allow us to ‘escape’ the environment of which we are a part. Human-driven environmental change in the Indus Basin has had a demonstrated impact on political structures, where largely controlling water flows has been a key to statecraft
and consolidation of power during colonial
and post-colonial periods.”
The symposium arranged a combination of informative talks, panel discussions
and interactive question/answer sessions between speakers
and attendees. A diverse range of economic, historic, geographic, technical
and cultural issues relating to the Indus River Basin we
re discussed including: question of sovereignty in transboundary river basin management, inter-provincial water issues, political economy implications of canal colonization, irrigation impact of Green Revolution in India
and cultural representation of a river as a garden.
The Water Informatics
and Technology Center’s research
and outreach activities have been critical for building capacity in the water sector, helping to bridge the gap between academia
and practice,
and establish a fruitful co-operation between the academic community
and industry, development agencies, NGOs, public administration, local communities,
and other relevant institutions.