Your search found 5 records
1 Faysse, N.; Morardet, S. 1999. La mise en place d'un destion négociée de l'eau en France: L'exemple de la gestion des étiages sur le bassin de l' [The set up of negotiated water management in France: The case of low water management in the Adour River Basin]. In ICID, 17th Congress on Irrigation and Drainage, Granada, Spain, 1999: Water for Agriculture in the Next Millennium - Transactions, Vol.1F, Q.49: Rehabilitation and Modernization of Irrigation and Drainage Systems: 49.4: Quality of construction of civil works; Q.49.5: Introduction of new technologies to farmers; Q.49: Poster papers. New Delhi, India: ICID. pp.29-46.
River basins ; Water management ; Decentralization / France / Adour River basin
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: ICID 631.7 G000 ICI Record No: H025217)

2 Levite, H.; Faysse, N.; Ardorino, F. 2003. Resolving water use conflicts through stakeholder participation: Issues and examples from the Steelpoort Basin in South Africa. African Water Journal, Pilot edition, December:30-42.
Land management ; Water management ; Conflict resolution ; Water use efficiency / Sub Saharan Africa
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: VL Record No: H033911)
http://www.uneca.org/sdd/african_water_journal_rev.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H033911.pdf
(0.45 MB) (2.5 MB)

3 Leaky, R.; Caron. P.; Craufurd, P.; Martin, A.; McDonald, A.; Abedini, W.; Afiff, S.; Bakurin, N.; Bass, S.; Hilbeck, A.; Jansen, T.; Lhaloui, S.; Lock, K.; Newman, J.; Primavesi, O.; Sengooba, T.; Ahmed, M.; Ainsworth, E.; Ali, M.; Antona, M.; Avato, P.; Barker, D.; Bazile, D.; Bosc, P. M.; Bricas, N.; Burnod, P.; Cohen, J.; Coudel, E.; Dulcire, M.; Dugue, P.; Faysse, N.; Farolfi, S.; Faure, G.; Goli, T.; Grzywacz, D.; Hocde, H.; Imbernon, J.; Ishii-Eiteman, M.; Leakey, A.; Leakey, C.; Lowe, A.; Marr, A.; Maxted, N.; Mears, A.; Molden, David; Muller, J. P.; Padgham, J.; Perret, S.; Place, F.; Raoult-Wack, A. L.; Reid, R.; Riches, C.; Scherr, S.; Sibelet, N.; Simm, G.; Temple, L.; Tonneau, J. P.; Trebuil, G.; Twomlow, S.; Voituriez, T. 2009. Impacts of AKST on development and sustainability goals. In McIntyre, B. D.; Herren, H. R.; Wakhungu, J.; Watson, R. T. (Eds.). International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD): Agriculture at a Crossroads, global report. Washington, DC, USA: Island Press. pp.145-253.
Agricultural production ; Fish ; Livestock ; Crop management ; Water management ; Watershed management ; Agroforestry ; Poverty ; Health ; Gender
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H042791)
https://publications.iwmi.org/pdf/H042791.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H042791.pdf
(2.08 MB)

4 Faysse, N.; Cossio, V.; Quiroz, F.; Ampuero, R.; Paz, B. 2007. Less tension, limited decision: a multi stakeholder platform to review a contested sanitation project Tiquipaya, Bolivia. In Warner, J. (Ed.). Multi-stakeholder platforms for integrated water management. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate. pp.165-189. (Ashgate Studies in Environmental Policy and Practice)
Sanitation ; Drinking water ; Stakeholders ; Participatory management ; Indicators ; Valleys ; Technological changes / Bolivia / Tiquipaya
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H045987)

5 Faysse, N.; Sellika, I. E.; Rinaudo, J.-D.; Errahj, M. 2018. Participatory scenario planning for sustainable irrigated agriculture when actors seldom communicate: an experiment in Morocco. International Journal of Water Resources Development, 34(6):982-1000. [doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/07900627.2017.1322500]
Irrigated farming ; Sustainability ; Participatory approaches ; Planning ; Stakeholders ; Communication ; Water resources ; Groundwater ; Water management ; Water use ; Agricultural development ; Supply chain ; Tree farming ; Social aspects ; Case studies / Morocco / Ain Timguenay
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H048946)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H048946.pdf
(0.86 MB)
In Morocco, agricultural activities based on groundwater use increasingly face risks of aquifer overdraft and market saturation. However, farmers and public organizations responsible for agriculture and water resources rarely communicate to identify how these risks could be overcome. A participatory scenario-planning process was organized in a small region to identify a pathway towards agricultural activities that are sustainable in terms of groundwater resource use and profitability. Actors jointly determined this pathway thanks to the organization of preparatory workshops held separately with each actor before they met together, and the progressive integration of agriculture development and groundwater use in scenario design.

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