Your search found 7 records
1 Trivedy, R. K. (Ed.) 2000. Pollution and biomonitoring of Indian Rivers. Jaipur, India: ABD Publishers. 344p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 574.526323 G635 TRI Record No: H028408)
2 Garg, S. L.; Preeti, B.; Rama, B.; Sharma, R.; Jindal, M.; Joshi, K.; Vyas, S. 2000. Pollution studies on the Khan River at Indore. In Trivedy, R. K. (Ed.), Pollution and biomonitoring of Indian Rivers. Jaipur, India: ABD Publishers. pp.154-158.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 574.526323 G635 TRI Record No: H028420)
3 Sharma, R. A.; Verma, O. P.; Kool, Y. M.; Chaurasia, M. C.; Saraf, G. P.; Nema, R. S.; Chauhan, Y. S. 2003. Improving management of natural resources for sustainable rainfed agriculture in Ringnodia micro-watershed. In Wani, S. P.; Maglinao, A. R.; Ramakrishna, A.; Rego, T. J. (Eds.), Integrated watershed management for land and water conservation and sustainable agricultural production in Asia: Proceedings of the ADB-ICRISAT-IWMI Project Review and Planning Meeting, 10-14 December 2001, Hanoi, Vietnam. Andhra Pradesh, India; Colombo, Sri Lanka; Manila, Philippines: ICRISAT; IWMI; ADB. pp.134-148.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G570 WAN Record No: H034987)
(10.29 MB)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: IWMI 631.7.4 G635 LON Record No: H037056)
(0.24 MB)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 631.7.5 G635 NAR Record No: H044743)
(0.32 MB)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H047683)
(0.54 MB)
Efforts by international development agencies to design gender-sensitive projects have sharpened their focus on women’s participation in community-level water governance. In some cases, such goals have enhanced women’s self-confidence and developed their skills despite having negligible impact on project outcomes. In others, they have simply been reduced to tokenism. This paper analyzes community-managed water supply projects for the urban poor in Madhya Pradesh, India, to provide a better understanding of the gap between women’s motivation to participate and their ability or agency to do so. It highlights how bridging this gap could be pivotal in strengthening women’s role in water governance.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H047909)
(0.41 MB)
The study was conducted on the status of water supply at Indore through SDWQ. The performance of the Narmada and Devdharan WTPs was assessed from catchment to consumer for consecutive 7 days during three seasons. No significant change in raw water quality was observed on day-to-day basis. During monsoon, the turbidity of raw water was 690–1530 NTU which was reduced to 0.3–3.7 NTU after treatment. TC and FC were not detected in filtered water. The treated water quality was found within CPHEEO guidelines. At ESR, the residual chlorine was 0.1–0.6 mg/l. During winter, the water from ESR and from consumer ends was free from FC, whereas TC counts at consumer ends were 7–607 CFU/100 ml. During summer, on one occasion, TC and FC counts were found in ESR, whereas at the consumer ends, most of the samples were positive for TC and FC. The variation in bacterial counts amongst the different service reservoirs and consumer ends was due to poor maintenance of ESRs and enroute contamination. The proper maintenance of the distribution network, awareness about the hygienic and sanitary conditions around the public taps and proper storage of water are prerequisites in maintaining safe water supply in the city.
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