Introduction to the Special Issue: Flows and practices – The politics of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) in southern Africa

For the past two decades, IWRM has been actively promoted by water experts as well as multilateral and bilateral donors who have considered it to be a crucial way to address global water management problems. IWRM has been incorporated into water laws, reforms and policies of southern African nations...

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Main Authors: Lyla Mehta, Synne Movik, Alex Bolding, Bill Derman, Emmanuel Manzungu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Water Alternatives Association 2016-10-01
Series:Water Alternatives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol9/v9issue3/337-a9-3-1/file
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spelling doaj-a49e57c68a4843e9aebc65946ee949e72020-11-25T01:10:26ZengWater Alternatives AssociationWater Alternatives1965-01751965-01752016-10-0193389411Introduction to the Special Issue: Flows and practices – The politics of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) in southern Africa Lyla MehtaSynne MovikAlex BoldingBill Derman Emmanuel Manzungu For the past two decades, IWRM has been actively promoted by water experts as well as multilateral and bilateral donors who have considered it to be a crucial way to address global water management problems. IWRM has been incorporated into water laws, reforms and policies of southern African nations. This article introduces the special issue 'Flows and Practices: The Politics of IWRM in southern Africa'. It provides a conceptual framework to study: the flow of IWRM as an idea; its translation and articulation into new policies, institutions and allocation mechanisms, and the resulting practices and effects across multiple scales – global, regional, national and local. The empirical findings of the complexities of articulation and implementation of IWRM in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Tanzania and Uganda form the core of this special issue. We demonstrate how Africa has been a laboratory for IWRM experiments, while donors as well as a new cadre of water professionals and students have made IWRM their mission. The case studies reveal that IWRM may have resulted in an unwarranted policy focus on managing water instead of enlarging poor women’s and men’s access to water. The newly created institutional arrangements tended to centralise the power and control of the State and powerful users over water and failed to address historically rooted inequalities.http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol9/v9issue3/337-a9-3-1/fileIWRMwater policies and reformaccess to waterdonorssouthern Africa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lyla Mehta
Synne Movik
Alex Bolding
Bill Derman
Emmanuel Manzungu
spellingShingle Lyla Mehta
Synne Movik
Alex Bolding
Bill Derman
Emmanuel Manzungu
Introduction to the Special Issue: Flows and practices – The politics of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) in southern Africa
Water Alternatives
IWRM
water policies and reform
access to water
donors
southern Africa
author_facet Lyla Mehta
Synne Movik
Alex Bolding
Bill Derman
Emmanuel Manzungu
author_sort Lyla Mehta
title Introduction to the Special Issue: Flows and practices – The politics of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) in southern Africa
title_short Introduction to the Special Issue: Flows and practices – The politics of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) in southern Africa
title_full Introduction to the Special Issue: Flows and practices – The politics of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) in southern Africa
title_fullStr Introduction to the Special Issue: Flows and practices – The politics of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) in southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Introduction to the Special Issue: Flows and practices – The politics of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) in southern Africa
title_sort introduction to the special issue: flows and practices – the politics of integrated water resources management (iwrm) in southern africa
publisher Water Alternatives Association
series Water Alternatives
issn 1965-0175
1965-0175
publishDate 2016-10-01
description For the past two decades, IWRM has been actively promoted by water experts as well as multilateral and bilateral donors who have considered it to be a crucial way to address global water management problems. IWRM has been incorporated into water laws, reforms and policies of southern African nations. This article introduces the special issue 'Flows and Practices: The Politics of IWRM in southern Africa'. It provides a conceptual framework to study: the flow of IWRM as an idea; its translation and articulation into new policies, institutions and allocation mechanisms, and the resulting practices and effects across multiple scales – global, regional, national and local. The empirical findings of the complexities of articulation and implementation of IWRM in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Tanzania and Uganda form the core of this special issue. We demonstrate how Africa has been a laboratory for IWRM experiments, while donors as well as a new cadre of water professionals and students have made IWRM their mission. The case studies reveal that IWRM may have resulted in an unwarranted policy focus on managing water instead of enlarging poor women’s and men’s access to water. The newly created institutional arrangements tended to centralise the power and control of the State and powerful users over water and failed to address historically rooted inequalities.
topic IWRM
water policies and reform
access to water
donors
southern Africa
url http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol9/v9issue3/337-a9-3-1/file
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