Your search found 5 records
1 Mukherjee, M.. 1988. Peasant resistance and peasant consciousness in colonial India: Subalterns and beyond. Economic and Political Weekly, 23(41):2109-2120.
Peasant workers ; Colonialism ; Political attitudes / India
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 3083 Record No: H05259)

2 Mukherjee, M.. 1996. Towards gender-aware data systems: Indian experience. Economic and Political Weekly, October 26:WS-63/71.
Gender relations ; Education ; Employment ; Health ; Databases ; Wages ; Female labor ; Agricultural manpower ; Indicators / India
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 4422 Record No: H019993)

3 Mukherjee, M.. 2003. Waste-fed fisheries in periurban Kolkata. Urban Agriculture Magazine, 10:36-37.
Fisheries ; Wastewater ; Farming systems ; Ecology / India / Kolkata
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 6499 Record No: H032735)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H_32735.pdf

4 Scott, Christopher; Faruqui , N.; Carr, R.; Blumenthal, U.; Amerasinghe, Felix; Redwood, M.; Ramachandran, G.; Al-Beiruti, S. N.; Prain, G.; Gopal, M. G.; Raschid, Liqa; Huibers, F.; Agodzo, S.; Mukherjee, M.; Madsen, T.; Cornish, G.; Silva, P.; Minhas, P. S.; Niang, S.; Al Khatib, N.; Ghougassian, B.; Drechsel, Pay; Shetty, S.; Blummel, M.; Sengupta, A. K.; Matsuno, Y.; van Veenhuizen, R.; Hall, A.; Keraita, Bernard; Simmons, Rob; Shalabi, M.; Murray-Rust, Hammond; Hainsworth, S.; Rajan, V.; Buechler, Stephanie; Reddy, U. M.; McCornick, Peter; Devi, Gayathri; Kielen, N.; Ensink, Jeroen; Devi, Rama; van der Hoek, Wim; Kundu, N.; Haan, Max; Abayawardana, Sarath; Narayana, P.; Bouma, Jetske. 2005. The Hyderabad Declaration on Wastewater Use in Agriculture, 14 November 2002, Hyderabad, India. [A public statement]. 3p.
Declarations ; Wastewater irrigation ; Water reuse / Pakistan / India / Hyderabad
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H043804)
http://www.iwmi.cgiar.org/health/wastew/hyderabad_declaration.htm

5 Mukherjee, M.; Chindarkar, N.; Gronwall, J. 2015. Non-revenue water and cost recovery in urban India: the case of Bangalore. Water Policy, 17(3):484-501. [doi: https://doi.org/10.2166/wp.2014.304]
Water supply ; Urban areas ; Water costs ; Cost recovery ; Pricing ; Households ; Domestic water ; Water users ; User charges ; Low income groups ; Tube wells ; Socioeconomic environment ; Case studies / India / Bangalore / Halsoor / Hebbal / Vijinapura / Kengeri / Shettihalli / Bellanduru
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H047403)
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H047403.pdf
(0.28 MB)
This paper examines the issue of non-revenue water (NRW) in urban India, taking the city of Bangalore as a case study. Using empirical evidence from a survey conducted among 601 low-income households in Bangalore, we investigate the major sources of NRW for water utilities and propose policy recommendations based on the analysis. Our key finding is that public stand posts and public wells, which supply free water, are a non-trivial source of NRW. In addition, we find that revenue generation from metered tap connections is sub-optimal. Further, we observe potential revenue being shifted away from the public water utilities toward private providers, as several households pay for water obtained from neighbours, tankers, or other private sources. Drawing upon our findings, we propose a new tariff structure for urban water utilities to consider. We also review the implementation of prepayment metering for public stand posts in other developing countries and its feasibility in Bangalore.

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