Digital Hydrohegemony: Technological Governance and the Reconfiguration of Power in Transboundary River Systems


Natosha Hoduski, Indiana University (United States)

The hydrohegemony framework has been used to analyze power dynamics in transboundary basins by, traditionally, focusing on geographic position, material power, bargaining power, and ideational power. This paper extends the Zeitoun and Warner framework to address a critical and growing contemporary blind spot: the rapid digitization of hydraulic systems and river system management. We introduce "hydro-technological capacity" as a distinct fifth dimension of power to fill this void. Integrating digital architecture into critical infrastructure creates both avenues for efficiency and cooperation but also latent critical security threats, e.g., cyber-physical vulnerabilities, that fundamentally reconfigure basin dynamics. Rather than functioning exclusively as a depoliticized pathway to efficiency, modernization creates new avenues to exercise power and perform counter-hegemonic contestation. We explore this structural shift through three interconnected concepts. First, we identify a "fleet in being" effect, where the credible threat of digital disruption serves as a non-kinetic negotiating currency. Second, the "Glass Giant" paradox demonstrates how infrastructural modernization actually expands a state's attack surface, potentially making materially powerful actors structurally vulnerable and, thus, susceptible to disruption by counterhegemonic actors. And finally, we examine the grey zone of digital diplomacy, where attribution ambiguity empowers non-state and covertly state-sponsored actors to operate below the threshold of formal conflict while still utilizing water resources and associated hydraulic infrastructure to contest the status quo. Using comparative case studies across diverse geopolitical contexts, including the Middle East, North Africa, and Eastern Europe, this research updates hydrohegemony for an era where water control is inextricably linked to digital integration and capacity. Thank you for reading my abstract and apologies for the late reply. I have an art piece accepted to the conference as well and was hoping there might still be latitude to allow me to Workshop an idea to help get some clarity on this important research topic if there is space for that. I would also be delighted to be considered for any other roles (I know it's quite last minute, but particularly if there have been any dropouts) as a discussant or panelist presenting a paper. My preference would be to get feedback on this idea as it's still quite nascent, and I am struggling a bit with an issue in our theoretical contribution, but participation in pretty much any capacity would be wonderful. Thank you!