%0 Journal Article %9 ACL : Articles dans des revues avec comité de lecture répertoriées par l'AERES %A Riaux, Jeanne %A Ogilvie, Andrew %A Jenhaoui, Z. %T More than just water ! Hydraulic materiality and the process of resource making : a sociohydrological reading of Tunisian hillside reservoirs %D 2020 %L fdi:010078674 %G ENG %J Journal of Rural Studies %@ 0743-0167 %K AMENAGEMENT HYDRAULIQUE ; RESERVOIR ; HISTOIRE ; CONSERVATION DU SOL ; DEVELOPPEMENT RURAL ; BASSIN VERSANT %K CONSERVATION DE L'EAU ; GESTION DE L'EAU ; UTILISATION DE L'EAU ; BARRAGE COLLINAIRE %K TUNISIE %K MERGUELLIL BASSIN VERSANT ; KAIROUAN REGION ; TUNISIE CENTRALE %M ISI:000580930700012 %P 125-135 %R 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2020.08.041 %U https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010078674 %> https://www.documentation.ird.fr/intranet/publi/depot/2020-09-01/010078674.pdf %V 79 %W Horizon (IRD) %X Fulfilling both "Water and soil conservation" and "Integrated rural development" objectives, hillside reservoirs are very popular components of water and/or rural management strategies. In Central Tunisia, more than 800 reservoirs have been built since the 1950s. These have been the subject of an abundant literature by both social and physical scientists. However, this literature, which is highly segmented and often centred on the technical and economic assessment of development programs, does not help understand the different logics at work in the appropriation of these technical objects by the different actors involved. To achieve this goal, our research based on a "sociohydrological negotiation", articulates the methods and research questions of hydrology and anthropology on a same case study in Central Tunisia. An initial survey of water use and management practices around hillside reservoirs in the Merguellil Catchment revealed the wide variety of the infrastructures and the multiple functions they fulfil. These initial observations underpinned the process of negotiating an interdisciplinary framework to analyze the social, physical and technical dimensions of hillside reservoirs. To trace the history of watershed development policies implemented in the Merguellil Catchment, we first examined the multiple embedded logics underlying Tunisian hillside reservoir planning. This led to the production of "sociohydrological narratives" for four hillside reservoirs that both combined and enabled us to analyze the inhabitants' own accounts of their reservoir history. This ethnographical material was then examined through the lense of a "esource making process". Considering the way in which hydraulic objects function in a landscape that is both socio-political and hydrological enabled us to analyze the different aspects of this resource making process, from water valuation to the production of "hydraulic localities". %$ 098HYSOC ; 062EVAEAU01