Similar Items: Improving water allocation through multi-stakeholder platforms in the Mae Kuang watershed northern Thailand
- Participation of local people in water management: evidence from the Mae Sa Watershed, northern Thailand
- The off-site effect of soil erosion: a case study of the Mae Thang Reservoir in Northern Thailand
- Off-site effect of soil erosion: A case study of the Mae Thang reservoir in northern Thailand
- Development of water-management institutions in the Mae Klong River Basin, Thailand
- Multi-objective optimal planning of land and water resources for sustainable small- holder agriculture: Case study in the Mae Klong River Basin, Thailand
- Managing the invisible: improving groundwater governance in Pakistan through multi-stakeholder platforms
Author: Ganjanapan, S.
Author: Lebel, L.
- Place-based lessons for regional economic development and sustainability
- Local irrigation management institutions mediate changes driven by external policy and market pressures in Nepal and Thailand
- Power and politics in water governance: revisiting the role of collective action in the commons
- Collective action in water management through regional networks: Critical reflections from M-POWER experiences
- Climate change and the science and practice of managing floods in urbanizing regions of Monsoon Asia
- Politics of floods and disasters