Your search found 5 records
1 2000. Tryst with rain: Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh. Down to Earth, 9(11):32-47.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 5495 Record No: H026824)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 627.8 G000 DUB Record No: H029597)
(4.90MB)
Report on the Water Commission on Dams' experiment and assessing its implications for future global public policymaking.
3 Mehta, L. 2001. The manufacture of popular perceptions of scarcity: Dams and water-related narratives in Gujarat, India. World Development, 29(12):2025-2041.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 6688 Record No: H033737)
4 Wood, J. R. 2007. The politics of water resource development in India: the Narmada dams controversy. New Delhi, India: Sage. 285p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.9162 G635 WOO Record No: H041764)
5 Ballabh, V. (Ed.) 2008. Governance of water: institutional alternatives and political economy. New Delhi, India: SAGE Publications. 386p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.91 G635 BAL Record No: H042114)
This book makes an effort to initiate the discourse of governance of water in the Indian context from a variety of angles, such as neo-classical and institutional economics, deliberative democracy, public administration, collective action and political economy perspectives. Reform in water governance not only includes a re-orientation of policy priorities and approaches, but also the restructuring of the institutional framework away from the state and village dichotomy. New ‘intermediate’ institutions are required to allow a negotiated approach to water resource governance, multi-stakeholder participation, and integrated water resource management at various levels: the village, state, and nation as a whole.
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