Governments, NGOs and financers invest considerable resources in rural domestic water supplies and irrigation development. However, elite capture and underuse, if not complete abandonment, are frequent. While the blame is often put on 'corrupt, lazy and indisciplined' communities, this article explores the question of how the public water sector itself contributes to this state of affairs. Four case studies, which are part of the research project Cooperation and Conflict in Local Water Governance, are examined: two domestic water supply projects (Mali, Vietnam); one participatory multiple use project (Zambia); and one large-scale irrigation project (Bolivia). It was found that accountability of water projects was upward and tended to lie in...
During the water decade of 1980-90, water programs evolved from purely engineering solutions through...
This paper examines the organisational modalities of farmer-led irrigation systems in Tsangano, Moza...
In the world, almost one in every ten people is without access to an improved potable and safe drink...
Governments, NGOs and financers invest considerable resources in rural domestic water supplies and i...
This paper explores the contradiction between the need for large scale interventions in rural water ...
In many countries, the challenge of sustaining rural water supplies is entrusted to community organi...
Media stories often speak of a future dominated by large-scale water wars. Rather less attention has...
Media stories often speak of a future dominated by large-scale water wars. Rather less attention has...
Water governance reforms are underway in many parts of the developing world. They address the princi...
Paper presented at the International Conference on Fresh Water Governance for Sustainable Developmen...
Community management has remained the dominant paradigm for managing rural water supplies in sub-Sah...
I worked for Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) as a rural community development worker f...
The distribution of water use is undoubtedly the sharpest inequality inherited from the past in Sout...
In developing countries, the dominant model for managing rural water supplies is a community-level a...
This paper tries to demonstrate how water as a scarce resource is being used as a political and soci...
During the water decade of 1980-90, water programs evolved from purely engineering solutions through...
This paper examines the organisational modalities of farmer-led irrigation systems in Tsangano, Moza...
In the world, almost one in every ten people is without access to an improved potable and safe drink...
Governments, NGOs and financers invest considerable resources in rural domestic water supplies and i...
This paper explores the contradiction between the need for large scale interventions in rural water ...
In many countries, the challenge of sustaining rural water supplies is entrusted to community organi...
Media stories often speak of a future dominated by large-scale water wars. Rather less attention has...
Media stories often speak of a future dominated by large-scale water wars. Rather less attention has...
Water governance reforms are underway in many parts of the developing world. They address the princi...
Paper presented at the International Conference on Fresh Water Governance for Sustainable Developmen...
Community management has remained the dominant paradigm for managing rural water supplies in sub-Sah...
I worked for Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) as a rural community development worker f...
The distribution of water use is undoubtedly the sharpest inequality inherited from the past in Sout...
In developing countries, the dominant model for managing rural water supplies is a community-level a...
This paper tries to demonstrate how water as a scarce resource is being used as a political and soci...
During the water decade of 1980-90, water programs evolved from purely engineering solutions through...
This paper examines the organisational modalities of farmer-led irrigation systems in Tsangano, Moza...
In the world, almost one in every ten people is without access to an improved potable and safe drink...