Collective groundwater management by water users—self-regulation—is increasingly advocated as a complement to state regulation. This article analyzes the attempts by the Guanajuato State Water Commission (CEAG) in central Mexico to promote user self-regulation through the establishment and development of 14 Consejos Técnicos de Aguas (COTAS; Technical Water Councils). Based on a joint assessment by a former senior CEAG policy-maker and two researchers, Guanajuato’s groundwater-management policy is reviewed to understand why user self-regulation was less successful than expected. It concludes that increasing awareness and improving the knowledge base on groundwater is not enough to trigger self-regulation by groundwater users. A wider delega...
Although groundwater has traditionally supplied a significant portion of the water that humans use f...
Graduation date:June 17, 2017Globally, as surface water quality and quantity diminishes there is inc...
Over the last decade, transboundary aquifers traversing the Mexico‐Texas border have generated growi...
Collective groundwater management by water users—self-regulation—is increasingly advocated as a comp...
Evidence of groundwater management by aquifer users emerging under Integrated Water Resources Manage...
Around the world it has proven very difficult to develop policies and interventions that ensure soci...
There is a controversy in groundwater management: some people argue that public participation has de...
In Mexico, there is no specific policy for the governance of transboundary groundwaters. In fact, t...
The aim of this study is to assess the social responses to protect and prevent conflict over groundw...
In this article I present the politics that spurred groundwater development in Central and Northern ...
In Mc Lean, A. (Ed.) Estudios agrarios. Mexico, D.F., Mexico: Procuraduria Agrari
Worldwide, groundwater overdraft is one issue faced in urban and rural environments impacting water ...
In Mexico, groundwater availability has been decreasing, especially in arid and semiarid regions; th...
Binational efforts to understand, assess, and manage shared groundwater resources on the Mexico‐Texa...
The debate over groundwater aquifers that underlie more than one sovereign nation is not particular ...
Although groundwater has traditionally supplied a significant portion of the water that humans use f...
Graduation date:June 17, 2017Globally, as surface water quality and quantity diminishes there is inc...
Over the last decade, transboundary aquifers traversing the Mexico‐Texas border have generated growi...
Collective groundwater management by water users—self-regulation—is increasingly advocated as a comp...
Evidence of groundwater management by aquifer users emerging under Integrated Water Resources Manage...
Around the world it has proven very difficult to develop policies and interventions that ensure soci...
There is a controversy in groundwater management: some people argue that public participation has de...
In Mexico, there is no specific policy for the governance of transboundary groundwaters. In fact, t...
The aim of this study is to assess the social responses to protect and prevent conflict over groundw...
In this article I present the politics that spurred groundwater development in Central and Northern ...
In Mc Lean, A. (Ed.) Estudios agrarios. Mexico, D.F., Mexico: Procuraduria Agrari
Worldwide, groundwater overdraft is one issue faced in urban and rural environments impacting water ...
In Mexico, groundwater availability has been decreasing, especially in arid and semiarid regions; th...
Binational efforts to understand, assess, and manage shared groundwater resources on the Mexico‐Texa...
The debate over groundwater aquifers that underlie more than one sovereign nation is not particular ...
Although groundwater has traditionally supplied a significant portion of the water that humans use f...
Graduation date:June 17, 2017Globally, as surface water quality and quantity diminishes there is inc...
Over the last decade, transboundary aquifers traversing the Mexico‐Texas border have generated growi...