Transparency Short-Circuited: Laughter and Numbers in Costa Rican Water Politics

dc.citation.firstpage223en_US
dc.citation.issueNumber2en_US
dc.citation.journalTitlePoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Reviewen_US
dc.citation.lastpage241en_US
dc.citation.volumeNumber35en_US
dc.contributor.authorBallestero, Andrea S.en_US
dc.date.accessioned2015-04-21T15:39:46Zen_US
dc.date.available2015-04-21T15:39:46Zen_US
dc.date.issued2012en_US
dc.description.abstractBetween 2006 and 2009, a group of Costa Rican NGOs, a Spanish aid agency, and local residents were entangled in the pursuit of transparency as a means to allocate funding for their “human right to water” project initiatives. Designed as a series of pedagogical activities to “build” local knowledge about water management, the aid agency conditioned their funding to the honest and correct implementation of the project as revealed by a system of indicators. Against orthodoxy, project leaders were put in charge of designing and implementing the auditing system, an arrangement that short-circuited the foundational separation between observers and observed that is customary in transparency-creation projects and gave the whole initiative an experimental quality. This article examines the building of that indicator system, my informants’ own fascination with producing “speaking numbers,” and the punctuated but constitutive role that laughter played in the process. I suggest that numeric indicators and laughter make the audit speak about intensity and emphasis rather than about the exclusive and discrete categories on which transparency is usually predicated. Here, the audit allowed political actors to rework the potential of water governance technologies, rather than limiting them to their explicit possibilities, in order to constitute what project participants imagine as an integral form of political agency. I argue that paying attention to the in-between process of creating the audit, before its final results are disclosed, highlights the self-referential, short-circuited, and productive uses of transparency as a political device.en_US
dc.identifier.citationBallestero, Andrea S.. "Transparency Short-Circuited: Laughter and Numbers in Costa Rican Water Politics." <i>PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review,</i> 35, no. 2 (2012) Wiley: 223-241. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1555-2934.2012.01200.x.en_US
dc.identifier.doihttp://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1555-2934.2012.01200.xen_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1911/79643en_US
dc.language.isoengen_US
dc.publisherWileyen_US
dc.rightsThis is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published article is copyrighted by Wiley.en_US
dc.subject.keywordindicatorsen_US
dc.subject.keywordlaughteren_US
dc.subject.keywordnumbersen_US
dc.subject.keywordauditen_US
dc.subject.keywordknowledgeen_US
dc.subject.keywordNGOsen_US
dc.titleTransparency Short-Circuited: Laughter and Numbers in Costa Rican Water Politicsen_US
dc.typeJournal articleen_US
dc.type.dcmiTexten_US
dc.type.publicationpost-printen_US
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