Your search found 14 records
1 Smout, I.. 1986. Training programmes for irrigation farmers: an example from East Java, Indonesia. London, UK: ODI. 19 p. (ODI/IIMI Irrigation Management Network Paper 86/1e)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: ODI/IIMI 86/1e Record No: H000820)
(1.25 MB)
This paper describes the Madura Groundwater Irrigation Project training program for tubewell operators and officers of the water users' associations. Background information on the overall project is given and the water management program is described. The majority of the paper examines in detail the training program that was designed and implemented to prepare the officials of the water users' associations to operate effectively and maintain the tubewells constructed in the system. A companion paper by Martin Burton (86/1d) describes a similar program to train irrigation staff in the East Java Irrigation Service.
2 Smout, I.. 1990. Farmer participation in planning, implementation and operation of small-scale irrigation projects. London, UK: ODI. 31p. (ODI/IIMI Irrigation Management Network Paper 90/2b)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: ODI/IIMI 90/2b Record No: H006821)
(2.83 MB)
3 van Bentum, R.; Kunzang Namgyal; Smout, I.. 1989. Successful renovation of a farmer's canal: A case study from Bhutan. In Rydzewski, J. R.; Ward, C. F. (Eds.) Irrigation theory and practice. Proceedings of the International Conference, University of Southampton, 12-15 September. London: Pentech Press. pp.221-230.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7 G000 RYD Record No: H07526)
4 Smout, I.. 1990. Farmer participation in planning, implementation and operation of small scale irrigation projects. Water Resources Journal, 167:56-65.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H08817)
5 Smout, I.. 1994. Many mini-methods, many mini-means. Ceres, 26(2):30-35.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 3505 Record No: H014660)
6 Smout, I.; Shaw, R. 1996. Technical brief no.48: Small earth dams. Waterlines, 14(4):15-18.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H018406)
7 Smout, I.. 1996. Management of weeds in irrigation and drainage channels. Unpublished project report (R5500), Water, Engineering and Development Centre, Loughborough University, 1 April 1993 to 31 March 1996. 7p. + annexes.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 4300 Record No: H018986)
8 Smout, I.; Parry-Jones, S. (Eds.) 1999. Lessons learned from NGO experiences in the water and sanitation sector. Loughborough, UK: Water, Engineering and Development Centre (WEDC) v, 159p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 628.1 G000 SMO Record No: H024254)
9 Pickford, J.; House, S.; Miles, D.; Ockelford, J.; Parr, J.; Saywell, D.; Shaw, R.; Skinner, B.; Smout, I.; Stear, R. (Eds.) 1997. Reaching the unreached - Challenges for the 21st century: Selected papers of the 22nd WEDC International Conference, New Delhi, India, 1996. London, UK; Leicestershire, UK: IT Publications; WEDC. 191p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 628.1 G000 PIC Record No: H025811)
10 Smout, I.. 1997. Irrigation project evaluation, Takeo, Cambodia. In Pickford, J.; House, S.; Miles, D.; Ockelford, J.; Parr, J.; Saywell, D.; Shaw, R.; Skinner, B.; Smout, I.; Stear, R. (Eds.), Reaching the unreached - Challenges for the 21st century: Selected papers of the 22nd WEDC International Conference, New Delhi, India, 1996. London, UK; Leicestershire, UK: IT Publications; WEDC. pp.106-109.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 628.1 G000 PIC Record No: H025826)
11 Barker, P.; Ferguson, C.; Smout, I.; Wade, M. 1996. Management of irrigation maintenance. In Pickford, J.; Barker, P.; Elson, B.; Ferguson, C.; Parr, J.; Saywell, D.; Shaw, R.; Skinner, B. (Eds.), Sustainability of water and sanitation systems: Selected papers of the 21st WEDC International Conference Kampala, Uganda, 1995. London, UK; Leicestershire, UK: IT Publications; WEDC. pp.3-6.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 628.1 G000 PIC Record No: H027103)
12 Sullivan, C. A.; Meigh, J. R.; Giacomello, A. M.; Fediw, T.; Lawrence, P.; Samad, M.; Mlote, S.; Hutton, C.; Allan, J. A.; Schulze, R. E.; Dlamini, D. J. M.; Cosgrove, W.; Priscoli, J. D.; Gleick, P.; Smout, I.; Cobbing, J.; Calow, R.; Hunt, C.; Hussain, A.; Acreman, M. C.; King, J.; Malomo, S.; Tate, E. L.; O’Regan, D.; Milner, S.; Steyl, I. 2003. The water poverty index: development and application at the community scale. Natural Resources Forum, 27(3):189-199.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H032686)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: PER Record No: H042832)
(0.22 MB)
The relationships between urban development, water resources management and wastewater use for irrigation have been studied in the cities of Accra in Ghana, Addis Ababa in Ethiopia and Hyderabad in India. Large volumes of water are extracted from water sources often increasingly far away from the city, while investments in wastewater management are often lagging behind. The resulting environmental degradation within and downstream of cities has multiple consequences for public health, in particular through the use of untreated wastewater in irrigated agriculture. Despite significant efforts to increase wastewater treatment, options for safeguarding public health via conventional wastewater treatment alone remain limited to smaller inner-urban watersheds. The new WHO guidelines for wastewater irrigation recognize this situation and emphasize the potential of post- or non-treatment options. Controlling potential health risks will allow urban water managers in all three cities to build on the benefits from the already existing (but largely informal) wastewater reuse, those being the contribution to food security and reduction of fresh water demands.
14 Van Rooijen, D.; Smout, I.; Drechsel, Pay; Biggs, T. 2014. Wastewater treatment capacity, food production and health risk in peri-urban areas: a comparison of three cities. In Maheshwari, B.; Purohit, R.; Malano, H.; Singh, V. P.; Amerasinghe, Priyanie. (Eds.). The security of water, food, energy and liveability of cities: challenges and opportunities for peri-urban futures. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer. pp.219-231. (Water Science and Technology Library Volume 71)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI Record No: H046689)
(3.72 MB)
Growing cities and their demand for water challenges the management of water resources and provides opportunities for wastewater use in irrigated agriculture. In the cases studied, large volumes of fresh water are extracted from sources often located increasingly further away from the city, while investments in wastewater disposal often lag behind. The resulting environmental impact in peri-urban areas can have multiple consequences for public health, in particular through the use of untreated or poorly treated wastewater in irrigated agriculture. Despite significant efforts to increase wastewater treatment, substantial volumes of untreated wastewater are applied in irrigated agriculture in Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), Accra (Ghana) and Hyderabad (India). Additional options for safeguarding public health are required to allow the cities to maintain the benefits from already existing, but largely informal, wastewater reuse.
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