Water Resources and Industry (Jun 2024)

On the tailor-made water governance mechanism for Taiwan's semiconductor industry

  • Shu-Chen Tsai,
  • Su-Hsin Lee,
  • Ta-Jen Chu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31
p. 100252

Abstract

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This study explores a new governance mechanism aimed at regional integration and explains how this mechanism can achieve optimal governance of water resources through the division of labour in politics and the economy. This study adopts political economic geography as the research approach. The data used in the analysis were obtained from official documents, interviews and field investigations, and its authenticity was interactively checked via triangulation. The results show that ‘spatial shifts’ were the driving force behind water redistribution. The division of labour between politics and the economy eliminates obstacles to water distribution through the mutual adjustment and division of underground rhizomes; ‘creative destruction’ and ‘destructive creation’ are alternately used to achieve dialectical progress. This study concludes that in this case, the process of regional integration simultaneously generates circular mechanisms in which political power and economic productivity are consolidated.

Keywords