Summary. — Increasing the capacity of water users to influence decision-making is crucial in river basin management reforms. This article assesses emerging forums for river basin management in Mexico and South Africa and concludes that the pace of democratization of water management in both is slow. Mexico is characterized by continued government dominance and attempts to include already organized stakeholders in decision-making, while substantive stakeholder representation is lacking. South Africa is placing emphasis on social mobilization and transformation, leading to a slower implementation process and struggles over the redistribution of resources. While not a panacea, moving from stakeholder participation to substantive stakeholder re...
The Okavango River basin is strategically important to its riparian states for a variety of reasons....
There have been many authors who have examined the question of participation and the extent of its i...
Water management is commonly assumed to be a mere technical matter where experts and managers endeav...
Increasing the capacity of water users to influence decision-making is crucial in river basin manage...
Copublished with Centre for Applied Social Sciences, University of ZimbabweCASS/PLAAS occasion paper...
Paper prepared for presentation at session on "Enough Water for All", at the Global Dialogue on "The...
Rival use of limited water resources among riparian states is often problematic and politically cont...
IWRM-led water reforms in southern Africa have emphasised the creation of new institutions with lit...
IWRM-led water reforms in southern Africa have emphasised the creation of new institutions with lit...
The call for a spatial fit between institutional arrangements and the resource they manage is reflec...
Drawing from the experience of the Limpopo River Basin in Mozambique, the paper analyses the articul...
Current mainstream visions of water management tend to promote a view of river basin development as ...
Bevlyne Sithole is a lecturer in the Centre for Applied Sciences and has worked on various projects ...
This article engages with the currently hegemonic status of a triad of water policy prescriptions: m...
Water management is commonly assumed to be a mere technical matter where experts and managers endeav...
The Okavango River basin is strategically important to its riparian states for a variety of reasons....
There have been many authors who have examined the question of participation and the extent of its i...
Water management is commonly assumed to be a mere technical matter where experts and managers endeav...
Increasing the capacity of water users to influence decision-making is crucial in river basin manage...
Copublished with Centre for Applied Social Sciences, University of ZimbabweCASS/PLAAS occasion paper...
Paper prepared for presentation at session on "Enough Water for All", at the Global Dialogue on "The...
Rival use of limited water resources among riparian states is often problematic and politically cont...
IWRM-led water reforms in southern Africa have emphasised the creation of new institutions with lit...
IWRM-led water reforms in southern Africa have emphasised the creation of new institutions with lit...
The call for a spatial fit between institutional arrangements and the resource they manage is reflec...
Drawing from the experience of the Limpopo River Basin in Mozambique, the paper analyses the articul...
Current mainstream visions of water management tend to promote a view of river basin development as ...
Bevlyne Sithole is a lecturer in the Centre for Applied Sciences and has worked on various projects ...
This article engages with the currently hegemonic status of a triad of water policy prescriptions: m...
Water management is commonly assumed to be a mere technical matter where experts and managers endeav...
The Okavango River basin is strategically important to its riparian states for a variety of reasons....
There have been many authors who have examined the question of participation and the extent of its i...
Water management is commonly assumed to be a mere technical matter where experts and managers endeav...