Print Email Facebook Twitter Policies lost in translation? Unravelling water reform processes in African waterscapes Title Policies lost in translation? Unravelling water reform processes in African waterscapes Author Kemerink-Seyoum, J.S. Contributor Van der Zaag, P. (promotor) Ahlers, R. (promotor) Faculty Civil Engineering and Geosciences Department Water Management Date 2015-12-10 Abstract Since the 1980s a major change took place in public policies for water resources management. The role of governments shifted under this reform process from an emphasis on investment in the development, operation and maintenance of water infrastructure to a focus on managing water resources systems by stipulating general frameworks and defining key principles for water allocation. This interdisciplinary research examines how this water reform process unfolds within four African waterscapes that are historically constituted by natural and social processes. The qualitative study analyzes the interplay between public policies designed and implemented by government agencies and the institutions that govern access to and control over water resources among groups of agricultural water users. The findings of this research show that the water reform policies have led to similar outcomes in dissimilar contexts and that water policy only to a limited extent lead to progressive institutional change concerning agricultural water use, especially in this neoliberal era. Moreover, this research shows that excluding targeted investments in the development of hydraulic infrastructure for historically disadvantaged groups has severely narrowed the options of the governments to redress the colonial legacy and the capacity of small-scale farmers to move their livelihood beyond subsistence. Subject water politicswater reformswaterscapeswater accesswater legislationwater rightspublic policywater users associationparticipationagricultural water useirrigationequitywater conflictwater cooperationcritical institutionalisminstitutionsinstitutional bricolagegenderlegal pluralismhydrosolidarityhydraulic infrastructureintegrated water resources managementneoliberalismsouthern Africaeastern Africa To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:c5d6f2ce-e9e1-4b98-8ddc-0db362adac68 Publisher CRC Press/Balkema ISBN 978-1-138-02943-9 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type doctoral thesis Rights (c) 2015 Kemerink-Seyoum, J.S. Files PDF 2015_UNESCO-IHE_PHD_THESI ... RINK_i.pdf 8.13 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:c5d6f2ce-e9e1-4b98-8ddc-0db362adac68/datastream/OBJ/view