Decolonizing Water

U.S. Water Policy and Water Crisis in the Diné Bikéyah: From 1849 to the Present

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12797/AdAmericam.26.2025.26.05

Keywords:

Diné People, Navajo Nation, water crisis, Colorado River, Native Americans, Winters rights, Arizona v. Navajo Nation

Abstract

Since the beginning of the 21st century, due to the growing water crisis and drought in the Southwest, water policy in the United States has become a crucial field of conflict between federal, state and tribal interests. Since 2000, the American Southwest has been experiencing severe droughts that, combined with outdated river management and overallocation of limited water supplies, put the Colorado River at serious risk. The Navajo Nation (Diné), living in the water-scarce, arid region, is disproportionately impacted by the crisis, with almost one-third of households lacking running water on the reservation. Despite the reservation’s historical and legal claims to water based on treaties and legal doctrines, the federal government has repeatedly failed to secure their water rights, leaving many Diné communities without basic water infrastructure, which leads to severe health, economic and cultural disparities. The article examines the intersection of historical, legal, social and environmental factors contributing to the Navajo Nation’s limited access to safe drinking water. The analysis begins with an overview of the history of the people, including the treaty-making and relocation era, which greatly contributed to the lack of resources that the Navajo Nation experiences today. Thereafter, the article explores the legal side of the issue, along with the Winters Doctrine (1908), the Colorado River Compact, as well as the Arizona v. California (1963) and Arizona v. Navajo Nation (2023) cases. The article also explores the empirical data regarding the current water crisis in the reservation, systemic barriers, such as industrial exploitation, infrastructure neglect, and the exacerbating effects of climate change, that perpetuate the crisis. Furthermore, it considers the cultural and spiritual significance of water for the Diné people, emphasizing its role as a cornerstone of sovereignty and resilience.

Author Biography

  • Patrycja Badzińska, Jagiellonian University

    PhD candidate in Political Sciences at the Jagiellonian University. Graduate of a bachelor’s degree in American Studies at the Institute of American Studies and Polish Diaspora of the Jagiellonian University, and a master’s degree in Political Science at the Institute of Political Science and International Relations of the Jagiellonian University. In July 2025, she defended her master’s thesis entitled “Diné constitutional status in the American federal system — analysis in the water law perspective”. Her research interests include issues related to Indigenous sovereignty, decolonial studies, Diné water law, the legacy of mining on tribal lands in the United States and Indigenous resistance towards extractive. In March 2025, she conducted a research project in the United States focusing on the water crisis in the Navajo Nation. This subject was also the focus of three papers she presented at international academic conferences: “Water, Decolonization and Spirituality: Navajo Traditional Knowledge as a Form of Building Ecological Peace in the Face of Drought” at the conference “Performing Religions, Faith, and Spirituality” in Tempe, Arizona, “Navajo Nation’s Water Rights in the Light of the Ethics of Hospitality— Hope for Change?” at the “American Hospitality” conference in Białystok, Poland and “Diné Water Security in the Face of Systemic Marginalization: The Political Dimension of the Water Crisis in the Navajo Nation”, at the 6th Jagiellonian Security Conference organized at JU in Kraków. She was an Erasmus+ scholarship holder in Örebro in 2023

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Published

2025-12-01

How to Cite

“Decolonizing Water: U.S. Water Policy and Water Crisis in the Diné Bikéyah: From 1849 to the Present”. Ad Americam, vol. 26, Dec. 2025, pp. 111-32, https://doi.org/10.12797/AdAmericam.26.2025.26.05.