Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism. National and supranational legislation and policy-making, however, focus on governance frameworks established by State and market actors. Consequently, development planning often ignores farmers’ rationality regarding sustainable water control. This paper's literature research examines how the notion of ‘hydraulic property creation’ in contexts of legal pluralism may support sustainable, self-governed irrigation systems. User-investment in hydraulic infrastructure generates collective water property relations. This socio-natural foundation of farmer-managed systems embeds (materializes) and entwines collective and individual water rights in...
Summaries This article illustrates the implications of legal pluralism for our understanding of nat...
A critical legal issue in water governance is who owns and who holds property rights in water. Hence...
Approximately 40 percent of the world’s food and 60 percent of its grain is produced under irrigatio...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
AbstractWhile the role of secure property rights contributing to sustainable natural resource manage...
AbstractWhile the role of secure property rights contributing to sustainable natural resource manage...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
This chapter uses a political ecology approach to examine how large dams and mega-hydraulic infrastr...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
In this paper we assess the impact of Franz von Benda-Beckmann's work in the field of water rights. ...
A critical legal issue in water governance is who owns and who holds property rights in water. Hence...
In this paper we assess the impact of Franz von Benda-Beckmann's work in the field of water rights. ...
Summaries This article illustrates the implications of legal pluralism for our understanding of nat...
A critical legal issue in water governance is who owns and who holds property rights in water. Hence...
Approximately 40 percent of the world’s food and 60 percent of its grain is produced under irrigatio...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
Worldwide, most irrigation systems are managed by farmer collectives, in contexts of legal pluralism...
AbstractWhile the role of secure property rights contributing to sustainable natural resource manage...
AbstractWhile the role of secure property rights contributing to sustainable natural resource manage...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
This chapter uses a political ecology approach to examine how large dams and mega-hydraulic infrastr...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
In this paper we assess the impact of Franz von Benda-Beckmann's work in the field of water rights. ...
A critical legal issue in water governance is who owns and who holds property rights in water. Hence...
In this paper we assess the impact of Franz von Benda-Beckmann's work in the field of water rights. ...
Summaries This article illustrates the implications of legal pluralism for our understanding of nat...
A critical legal issue in water governance is who owns and who holds property rights in water. Hence...
Approximately 40 percent of the world’s food and 60 percent of its grain is produced under irrigatio...