Balancing agricultural and environmental water needs in China: Alternative scenarios and policy options

The last two decades have been marked by a dramatic increase in global attention to the concept of governance, especially in relation to the effective and sustainable management of natural resources. Furthermore, South Africa has been through a rapid transition to democracy since 1994 with significa...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cai, Ximing, Ringler, Claudia
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: IWA Publishing 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/171854
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author Cai, Ximing
Ringler, Claudia
author_browse Cai, Ximing
Ringler, Claudia
author_facet Cai, Ximing
Ringler, Claudia
author_sort Cai, Ximing
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The last two decades have been marked by a dramatic increase in global attention to the concept of governance, especially in relation to the effective and sustainable management of natural resources. Furthermore, South Africa has been through a rapid transition to democracy since 1994 with significant changes in government, society and within the legislative environment. Despite the highly desirable attributes of these landmark pieces of legislation, almost a decade after their promulgation South African government authorities are still struggling to implement the requirements of these Acts. An investigation by the South African CSIR into the reasons for the non-implementation indicated that an incomplete understanding of the importance of governance was a central reason for the lack of successful implementation and that the concept of “governance” had not really been fully defined or explored. Countries and regions differed in their understanding and interpretation of “governance”, whilst equally wide differences were recorded in countries that had different levels of socio-economic and political development. In an effort to unpack the so-called “black box” of governance, a group of international specialists were invited to review governance issues related to their areas of technical specialization, covering different levels of development and maturity of democracy. Each specialist was challenged to interrogate a new “Trialogue” hypothesis on governance. A selection of the manuscripts is published in this special edition of Water Policy entitled Ecosystem Governance in Africa.
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spelling CGSpace1718542025-02-19T14:06:43Z Balancing agricultural and environmental water needs in China: Alternative scenarios and policy options Cai, Ximing Ringler, Claudia agricultural development environmental factors groundwater depletion water resources The last two decades have been marked by a dramatic increase in global attention to the concept of governance, especially in relation to the effective and sustainable management of natural resources. Furthermore, South Africa has been through a rapid transition to democracy since 1994 with significant changes in government, society and within the legislative environment. Despite the highly desirable attributes of these landmark pieces of legislation, almost a decade after their promulgation South African government authorities are still struggling to implement the requirements of these Acts. An investigation by the South African CSIR into the reasons for the non-implementation indicated that an incomplete understanding of the importance of governance was a central reason for the lack of successful implementation and that the concept of “governance” had not really been fully defined or explored. Countries and regions differed in their understanding and interpretation of “governance”, whilst equally wide differences were recorded in countries that had different levels of socio-economic and political development. In an effort to unpack the so-called “black box” of governance, a group of international specialists were invited to review governance issues related to their areas of technical specialization, covering different levels of development and maturity of democracy. Each specialist was challenged to interrogate a new “Trialogue” hypothesis on governance. A selection of the manuscripts is published in this special edition of Water Policy entitled Ecosystem Governance in Africa. 2007-11-01 2025-01-29T12:58:52Z 2025-01-29T12:58:52Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/171854 en Limited Access IWA Publishing Cai, Ximing; Ringler, Claudia. 2007. Balancing agricultural and environmental water needs in China: Alternative scenarios and policy options. Water Policy 9(S1): 95-108. https://doi.org/10.2166/wp.2007.047
spellingShingle agricultural development
environmental factors
groundwater depletion
water resources
Cai, Ximing
Ringler, Claudia
Balancing agricultural and environmental water needs in China: Alternative scenarios and policy options
title Balancing agricultural and environmental water needs in China: Alternative scenarios and policy options
title_full Balancing agricultural and environmental water needs in China: Alternative scenarios and policy options
title_fullStr Balancing agricultural and environmental water needs in China: Alternative scenarios and policy options
title_full_unstemmed Balancing agricultural and environmental water needs in China: Alternative scenarios and policy options
title_short Balancing agricultural and environmental water needs in China: Alternative scenarios and policy options
title_sort balancing agricultural and environmental water needs in china alternative scenarios and policy options
topic agricultural development
environmental factors
groundwater depletion
water resources
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/171854
work_keys_str_mv AT caiximing balancingagriculturalandenvironmentalwaterneedsinchinaalternativescenariosandpolicyoptions
AT ringlerclaudia balancingagriculturalandenvironmentalwaterneedsinchinaalternativescenariosandpolicyoptions