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Dear all,
as many of you may be thinking through the term nexus in the run up to this year's RGS-IBG, you may find the paper Rose Cairns and I have forthcoming in Environmental Science and Policy useful ; a pre-print version is now available on my academia.edu page https://www.academia.edu/27018703/Anatomy_of_a_buzzword_the_emergence_of_the_water-energy-food_nexus_in_UK_resource_debates

Anna

Dr Anna Krzywoszynska
Leverhulme Early Career Fellow
Geography, University of Sheffield
https://usheffield.academia.edu/AnnaKrzywoszynska
t: +44 0114 222 7972

Abstract

The existence of a water-energy-food ‘nexus’ has been gaining significant attention in international natural resource policy debates in recent years. We argue the term ‘nexus’ can be currently seen as a buzzword: a term whose power derives from a combination of ambiguous meaning and strong normative resonance. We explore the ways in which the nexus terminology is emerging and being mobilised by different stakeholders in natural resource debates in the UK context. We suggest that in the UK the mobilisation of the nexus terminology can best be understood as symptomatic of broader global science-policy trends, including an increasing emphasis on integration as an ideal; an emphasis on technical solutions to environmental problems; achievement of efficiency gains and ‘win-wins’; and a preference for technocratic forms of environmental managerialism. We identify and critique an ‘integrative imaginary’ underpinning much of the UK discourse around the concept of the nexus, and argue that attending to questions of power is a crucial but often underplayed aspect of proposed integration. We argue that while current efforts to institutionalise the language of the nexus as a conceptual framework for research in the UK may provide a welcome opportunity for new forms of transdisciplinary, they may risk turning nexus into a ‘matter of fact’ where it should remain a ‘matter of concern’. In this vein, we indicate ways of building nexus research upon critique.