Your search found 37 records
1 Boyd, C.; Turton, C.; Hatibu, N.; Mahoo, H. E.; Lazaro, E.; Rwehumbiza, F. B.; Okubal, P.; Makumbi, M. (Eds.) 2000. The contribution of soil and water conservation to sustainable livelihoods in semi-arid areas of Sub-Saharan Africa. ODI. Agricultural Research & Extension Network, iv, 16p. (AgRen network paper no.102)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 5452 Record No: H025953)
2 Hatibu, N.; Mahoo, H. 2001. Rainwater harvesting technologies for agricultural production: A case for Dodoma, Tanzania. Unpublished report. Sokoine University of Agriculture. Department of Agricultural Engineering and Land Planning, Morogoro, Tanzania. 20p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 5754 Record No: H028550)
3 Hatibu, N.; Mahoo, H. F. (Eds.) 2000. Rainwater harvesting for natural resources management: A planning guide for Tanzania. Nairobi, Kenya: SIDA. RELMA. x, 144p. (RELMA technical handbook series no.22)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.91 G148 HAT Record No: H029376)
(1.33 MB)
4 Mahoo, H. F.; Rwehumbiza, F. B.; Hatibu, N.. 2000. The wasted rainwater: Whose point of view? In Hatibu, N.; Mahoo, H. F. (Eds.), Rainwater harvesting for natural resources management: A planning guide for Tanzania. Nairobi, Kenya: SIDA. RELMA. pp.9-22.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G148 HAT Record No: H029377)
5 Hatibu, N.; Kajiru, G. J.; Senkondo, E. M. 2000. Technical integration of RWH into development plans: Think globally, plan locally. In Hatibu, N.; Mahoo, H. F. (Eds.), Rainwater harvesting for natural resources management: A planning guide for Tanzania. Nairobi, Kenya: SIDA. RELMA. pp.39-57.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G148 HAT Record No: H029379)
6 Hatibu, N.; Mahoo, H. F.; Kajiru, G. J. 2000. The role of RWH in agriculture and natural resources management: From mitigating droughts to preventing floods. In Hatibu, N.; Mahoo, H. F. (Eds.), Rainwater harvesting for natural resources management: A planning guide for Tanzania. Nairobi, Kenya: SIDA. RELMA. pp.58-83.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G148 HAT Record No: H029380)
7 Hatibu, N.; Mzirai, O. B.; Rockstr÷m, J. 2000. The information technology for planning RWH: Exploit the power of knowledge. In Hatibu, N.; Mahoo, H. F. (Eds.), Rainwater harvesting for natural resources management: A planning guide for Tanzania. Nairobi, Kenya: SIDA. RELMA. pp.113-136.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G148 HAT Record No: H029383)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H029802)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G148 LAN Record No: H030752)
(264.02 KB)
10 Hatibu, N.; Mahoo, H. F.; Mzirai, O. B. 2002. Relevance of Kenyan irrigation experience to Eastern and Southern Africa. In Blank, H. G.; Mutero, C. M.; Murray-Rust, H. (Eds.), The changing face of irrigation in Kenya: Opportunities for anticipating changes in Eastern and Southern Africa. Colombo, Sri Lanka, IWMI. pp.303-329.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7 G140 BLA Record No: H030845)
(0.14 MB)
11 Molden, D.; Turral, H.; Amerasinghe, F.; Sharma, B. R.; Hatibu, N.; Drechsel, P.; van Koppen, B.; Wester, F.; Tharme, R.; Raschid-Sally, L.; Samad, M.; Murray-Rust, H.; Shah, T.; Acreman, M.; Smakhtin, V.; Peden, D.; Burton, M.; Albergel, J.; Meinzen-Dick, R.; Dunkhorst, B.; Merrey, D.; Mustafa, M.; Brown, D.; Dalton, J.; Flugel, W.; Gichuki, F.; Harrington, L.; Moustafa, M.; Samarasinghe, S. A. P.; Wallender, W.; Mohammed, A. 2002. Integrating research in water, food and environment. Challenge Program on Water and Food background paper 4. In CGIAR Challenge Program on Water and Food. Challenge Program on Water and Food: background papers to the full proposal. Colombo, Sri Lanka: CGIAR Challenge Program on Water and Food. pp.115-160.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.91 G000 CGI Record No: H031290)
(2.41 MB)
12 Hatibu, N.. 2003. Rainwater management: strategies for improving water availability and productivity in semi-arid and arid areas. In Jinendradasa, S. S. (Comp.). Issues of water management in agriculture:compilation of essays. Colombo, Sri Lanka: Comprehensive Assessment Secretariat. pp.9-15.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7 G000 JIN Record No: H032473)
(4.33 MB)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 6766 Record No: H034176)
14 Hatibu, N.. 2003. The role of modern innovations and technologies in sustainable agriculture for development: implications for water management approaches and processes. In Beukes, D.; de Villiers, M.; Mkhize, S.; Sally, H.; van Rensburg, L. (Eds.). Proceedings of the Symposium and Workshop on Water Conservation Technologies for Sustainable Dryland Agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa (WCT), held at Bloem Spa Lodge and Conference Centre, Bloemfontein, South Africa, 8-11 April 2003. Pretoria, South Africa: ARC-Institute for Soil, Climate and Water. pp.76-80.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.1 G100 BEU Record No: H034390)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H034645)
(0.50 MB)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.3 G148 VAN Record No: H035857)
(625 KB)
In the past decade the Tanzanian government, with a loan from the World Bank, designed and implemented a new administrative water rights system with the aim of improving basin-level water management and cost-recovery for government water-resource management services. This paper evaluates the processes and impacts after the first years of implementing the new system in the Upper Ruaha catchment. In this area, the majority of water users are small-scale irrigators and livestock keepers who develop and manage water according to customary arrangements, without much state support. Although water resources are abundant, growing water demands intensify water scarcity during the dry season. Contrary to expectations, the new system has failed as a registration tool, a taxation tool, and a water management tool, and has also contributed to aggravating rural poverty. As a taxation tool, the system not only introduces corruption by design, but also drains government coffers because the collection costs are higher than any revenue gained. As a water management tool, the new system aggravates upstream-downstream conflicts, because the upstream water users claim that paying for water entitles them to use it as they like. However, unlike these and other counterproductive impacts of the new system, the taxation of the few private large-scale water users according to negotiated rates appeared to be feasible. The paper argues that the root of these paradoxical results lies in the dichotomy between the 'modern' large-scale rural and urban economy with its corresponding legislation and the rural spheres in which Tanzania's majority of small-scale water users live under customary water tenure. While the new water rights system fits the relatively better-off minority to some extent, it is an anomaly for Tanzania's majority of poor water users. This paper concludes by suggesting easy adaptations in the current water rights system that would accommodate both groups water users, improve cost-recovery for government services, mitigate water conflicts and alleviate rural poverty.
17 Hatibu, N.; Rockström, J. 2005. Green–blue water system innovations for upgrading of smallholder farming systems – a policy framework for development. Water Science & Technology, 51(8):121-131.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H037415)
18 Mkoga, Z. J.; Hatibu, N.; Mahoo, H.; Lankford, B.; Rao, K. P. C. 2005. Disparity of attitudes and practices on a concept of productivity of water in agriculture in the Great Ruaha River Sub-Basin. Paper presented at the East Africa Integrated River Basin Management Conference, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Morogoro, Tanzania, 7-9 March 2005. [Vol.1]. Funded by IWMI, and others. 11p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G132 SOK Record No: H037496)
19 Mutabazi, K. D.; Sekondo, E. E.; Mbilinyi, B. P.; Tumbo, D. S.; Mahoo, H. F.; Hatibu, N.. 2005. Economics of rainwater harvesting for crop enterprises in semi-arid areas: the case of Makanya Watershed in Pangani River Basin, Tanzania. Paper presented at the East Africa Integrated River Basin Management Conference, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Morogoro, Tanzania, 7-9 March 2005. [Vol.1]. Funded by IWMI, and others. 11p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G132 SOK Record No: H037519)
20 Mzirai, O. B.; Tumbo, S. D.; Bwana, T.; Hatibu, N.; Rwehumbiza, F. B.; Gowing, J. W. 2005. Evaluation of simulator of missing weather data (SMWD) required in simulation of agro hydrological modeling n the catchment and basin level: case of the PARCHED- THIRST and Marksim Model. Paper presented at the East Africa Integrated River Basin Management Conference, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Morogoro, Tanzania, 7-9 March 2005. [Vol.1]. Funded by IWMI, and others. 11p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G132 SOK Record No: H037521)
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