"Thirst: Fighting the Corporate Theft of Our Water" from
Wiley imprint Jossey-Bass
Remember the documentary film “Thirst”?
Did you know that the producers have now published a book? "Thirst:
Fighting the Corporate Theft of Our Water"
from Wiley imprint Jossey-Bass
Shipping March 5 in time for World Water Day on March 22.
Thirst: Fighting the Corporate Theft of Our Water,"
Alan Snitow and Deborah Kaufman
COMING OUT WORLD WATER DAY IN
MARCH 2007 FROM JOSSEY-BASS,
AN IMPRINT OF WILEY.
Is water a human right, or a commodity to be bought, sold, and traded
in the global marketplace? Will it become the oil of the 21st century?
A source of profit for those in control, and a commodity available only
to those who can afford to pay?
Out of sight of most Americans, global corporations like Nestle, Suez,
and Veolia are rapidly buying up our local water sources --lakes, streams,
and springs-- and taking control of public water services. In their drive
to privatize and commodify water, they manipulate and buy politicians,
clinch back room deals, and subvert the democratic process by denying
citizens a voice in fundamental decisions about their most essential public
resource.
The citizen response has stunned some of the world's largest companies.
It's an apple pie, grassroots rebellion that crosses conventional political
lines. Democrats, Republicans, radicals, evangelicals converge to defend
their water and their democracy from government complicity in corporate
globalization. It's a hometown resistance with global reach, and it is
the template for a future movement to take back democratic control of
public space, resources, and institutions from corporate oligarchies.
THIRST investigates eight recent high-profile controversies over the corporate
takeover of water (and wastewater treatment) in the U.S, and illuminates
how citizens are fighting back in heartland communities like Stockton,
CA, Lexington, KY, Holyoke, MA, and Mecosta County, MI. Political corruption,
high stakes financial takeovers, and behind the scenes maneuvering by
some of the richest corporations characterize a David and Goliath battle
in which local citizens muster creative and often surprising organizing
methods to preserve their right to local, public control of this precious
resource.
The PBS documentary Thirst showed how communities around the world are
resisting the privatization and commodification of water. Now THIRST,
the book, picks up where the documentary left off, revealing the emergence
of controversial new water wars here in the United States.
THIRST exposes the corporate attempts to:
- Take over municipal control of water in communities around the country
- Buy up rights to groundwater in the US
- Create and corner the market on bottled water
It also shows how people in affected communities are fighting back to
keep water affordable, accessible, sustainable and public:
- By creating new methods to challenge the corporate juggernaut in an
age of globalization
- By challenging tired clichés of Republican and Democratic political
alignments
We are at the tipping point in the new, global water wars. The United
States is ground zero. What happens in the next few years will determine
the fate of water and our basic democratic rights. THIRST
is a battlefield account of the conflict.
Alan Snitow and Deborah Kaufman
Snitow-Kaufman Productions
2600 Tenth Street
Berkeley, CA 94710
510 841-1068
amsnitow@igc.org
www.thirstthemovie.org
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