Your search found 5 records
1 Narayan, D.. 1993. Participatory evaluation: Tools for managing change in water and sanitation. Washington, DC, USA: World Bank. xi, 122p. (World Bank technical paper no.207)
Community development ; Rural development ; Participatory management ; Evaluation ; Water supply ; Water resource management ; Sanitation ; Participatory rural appraisal ; Training
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 307.1 G000 NAR Record No: H017681)

2 Narayan, D.; Srinivasan, L. 1994. Participatory development tool kit: Training materials for agencies and communities. Washington, DC, USA: World Bank. ix, 68p.
Community development ; Training ; Teaching materials ; Water supply ; Sanitation ; Gender ; Women ; Poverty ; Water users
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 307.1 G000 NAR Record No: H017693)

3 Narayan, D.. 1996. Toward participatory research. Washington, DC, USA: World Bank. viii, 265p. (World Bank technical paper no.307)
Water resources development ; Research methods ; Data collection ; Developing countries ; Social participation
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G000 NAR Record No: H018762)

4 Narayan, D.; Patel, R.; Schafft, K.; Rademacher, A.; Koch-Schulte, S. 2000. Voices of the poor: can anyone hear us? New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press (OUP) for the World Bank. xi, 343p.
Poverty ; Assessment ; Institutions ; Food security ; Employment ; Social aspects ; Natural disasters ; Households ; Public health ; Diseases ; Gender ; Non-governmental organizations ; Case studies ; Women ; Female labor ; Migrant labor ; Common property ; Villages / Eastern Europe / Russian Federation / Indonesia / Africa / India
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 339.46 G000 NAR Record No: H028404)

5 Goldman, M.; Narayan, D.. 2019. Water crisis through the analytic of urban transformation: an analysis of Bangalore’s hydrosocial regimes. Water International, 44(2):95-114. (Special issue: Rural-urban Water Struggles: Urbanizing Hydrosocial Territories and Evolving Connections, Discourses and Identities). [doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/02508060.2019.1578078]
Water scarcity ; Urbanism ; Towns ; Water supply ; Tanks ; Water market ; Water institutions ; Catchment areas ; Groundwater ; Social aspects ; Political aspects / India / Bangalore
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H049166)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H049166.pdf
(1.82 MB)
This paper explores intensified water crisis in Bangalore (or Bengaluru) in India by using the analytic of three hydrosocial regimes: the catchment-based regime, the hydraulic regime and the speculative urban regime. It uses a wide range of qualitative interviews, scientific reports and secondary sources to analyze shifting urban trajectories, agrarian relations and their interlinkages with water. Historical ruptures (in the realm of governance, urban growth and changing urban–rural dynamics) allow one to highlight the complex role of speculative logics that shape urban expansion and water scarcity.

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