Approximately 40 percent of the world’s food and 60 percent of its grain is produced under irrigation. Between 1900 and 1950 the total area under irrigation worldwide nearly doubled, rising from about 48 million to 94 million hectares, and by 2000 it had more than doubled again, reaching 240 million hectares.This dramatic expansion in irrigated area has produced an enormous and expensive infrastructure. Governments already straining under fiscal deficits often find themselves unable to meet the costs of adequately operating, maintaining, rehabilitating, and upgrading these systems..
Water reform has led to important improvements in how water is used, with net gains for society as a...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Institutions of collective action and systems of property rights shape how people use natural resour...
AbstractWhile the role of secure property rights contributing to sustainable natural resource manage...
agriculture still consumes more than 80 % of the total water used (Biswas, 1996). So, sustained effo...
Whilst the development of irrigation infrastructure has been proposed as a vehicle for poverty reduc...
In Meru, Tanzania local initiatives were instrumental in establishing a gravity irrigation system in...
In countries with transitional economies such as those found in South Asia, large-scale irrigation s...
Water has been called the first resource. Without it, life could not exist. With it, not only life b...
Presented at the 2000 USCID international conference, Challenges facing irrigation and drainage in t...
In countries with transitional economies such as those found in South Asia, large-scale irrigation s...
Farmer Managed Irrigation systems (FMIS) are common property resources (CPR) faced withthe various c...
It is common knowledge that water is more and more scarce, both in terms of quality and quantity. Ir...
Agricultural water has helped meet fast-rising demand for food and has contributed to the growth of ...
In countries with transitional economies such as those found in South Asia, large-scale irrigation s...
Water reform has led to important improvements in how water is used, with net gains for society as a...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Institutions of collective action and systems of property rights shape how people use natural resour...
AbstractWhile the role of secure property rights contributing to sustainable natural resource manage...
agriculture still consumes more than 80 % of the total water used (Biswas, 1996). So, sustained effo...
Whilst the development of irrigation infrastructure has been proposed as a vehicle for poverty reduc...
In Meru, Tanzania local initiatives were instrumental in establishing a gravity irrigation system in...
In countries with transitional economies such as those found in South Asia, large-scale irrigation s...
Water has been called the first resource. Without it, life could not exist. With it, not only life b...
Presented at the 2000 USCID international conference, Challenges facing irrigation and drainage in t...
In countries with transitional economies such as those found in South Asia, large-scale irrigation s...
Farmer Managed Irrigation systems (FMIS) are common property resources (CPR) faced withthe various c...
It is common knowledge that water is more and more scarce, both in terms of quality and quantity. Ir...
Agricultural water has helped meet fast-rising demand for food and has contributed to the growth of ...
In countries with transitional economies such as those found in South Asia, large-scale irrigation s...
Water reform has led to important improvements in how water is used, with net gains for society as a...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Institutions of collective action and systems of property rights shape how people use natural resour...