Defining water rights: by prescription or negotiation?

Establishing water rights is an appealing measure, which conveys a sense of orderliness and rationality that contrasts with a situation of assumed wastage, environmental degradation and conflicts. Transferable entitlements increase economic efficiency, while providing a compensation mechanism. The p...

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Main Author: Molle, Francois
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/41103
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author Molle, Francois
author_browse Molle, Francois
author_facet Molle, Francois
author_sort Molle, Francois
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Establishing water rights is an appealing measure, which conveys a sense of orderliness and rationality that contrasts with a situation of assumed wastage, environmental degradation and conflicts. Transferable entitlements increase economic efficiency, while providing a compensation mechanism. The paper distinguishes between formal rights defined through a bureaucratic process and flexible allocation rules designed through a gradual and continuous process of negotiation. It investigates the prerequisites, advantages and drawbacks of these two kinds of water rights, and examines how they apply to the specific natural and historical conditions of Sri Lanka. It concludes by showing that policy models must be tailored to the local situation and be based on what is feasible rather than on what is considered desirable
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spelling CGSpace411032023-09-23T17:57:17Z Defining water rights: by prescription or negotiation? Molle, Francois institutions river basins water rights equity Establishing water rights is an appealing measure, which conveys a sense of orderliness and rationality that contrasts with a situation of assumed wastage, environmental degradation and conflicts. Transferable entitlements increase economic efficiency, while providing a compensation mechanism. The paper distinguishes between formal rights defined through a bureaucratic process and flexible allocation rules designed through a gradual and continuous process of negotiation. It investigates the prerequisites, advantages and drawbacks of these two kinds of water rights, and examines how they apply to the specific natural and historical conditions of Sri Lanka. It concludes by showing that policy models must be tailored to the local situation and be based on what is feasible rather than on what is considered desirable 2004 2014-06-13T14:57:23Z 2014-06-13T14:57:23Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/41103 en Limited Access Molle, Fran?ois. 2004. Defining water rights: by prescription or negotiation? Water Policy, 6(3): 207-227.
spellingShingle institutions
river basins
water rights
equity
Molle, Francois
Defining water rights: by prescription or negotiation?
title Defining water rights: by prescription or negotiation?
title_full Defining water rights: by prescription or negotiation?
title_fullStr Defining water rights: by prescription or negotiation?
title_full_unstemmed Defining water rights: by prescription or negotiation?
title_short Defining water rights: by prescription or negotiation?
title_sort defining water rights by prescription or negotiation
topic institutions
river basins
water rights
equity
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/41103
work_keys_str_mv AT mollefrancois definingwaterrightsbyprescriptionornegotiation