From IWRM back to integrated water resources management

Integrated water resources management provides a set of ideas to help us manage water more holistically. However, these ideas have been formalized over time in what has now become, in capitals, Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM), with specific prescriptive principles whose implementation i...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Giordano, Mark, Shah, Tushaar
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Informa UK Limited 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/58364
_version_ 1855540294318030848
author Giordano, Mark
Shah, Tushaar
author_browse Giordano, Mark
Shah, Tushaar
author_facet Giordano, Mark
Shah, Tushaar
author_sort Giordano, Mark
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Integrated water resources management provides a set of ideas to help us manage water more holistically. However, these ideas have been formalized over time in what has now become, in capitals, Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM), with specific prescriptive principles whose implementation is often supported by donor funding and international advocacy. IWRM has now become an end in itself, in some cases undermining functioning water management systems, in others setting back needed water reform agendas, and in yet others becoming a tool to mask other agendas. Critically, the current monopoly of IWRM in global water management discourse is shutting out alternative thinking on pragmatic solutions to existing water problems. This paper explains these issues and uses examples of transboundary water governance in general, groundwater management in India and rural–urban water transfer in China to show that there are (sometimes antithetical) alternatives to IWRM which are being successfully used to solve major water problems. The main message is that we should simply get on with pragmatic politics and solutions to the world’s many individual water challenges.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace58364
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
publishDateSort 2014
publisher Informa UK Limited
publisherStr Informa UK Limited
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace583642025-06-17T08:24:18Z From IWRM back to integrated water resources management Giordano, Mark Shah, Tushaar water management international waters water governance water allocation water rates groundwater management river basins Integrated water resources management provides a set of ideas to help us manage water more holistically. However, these ideas have been formalized over time in what has now become, in capitals, Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM), with specific prescriptive principles whose implementation is often supported by donor funding and international advocacy. IWRM has now become an end in itself, in some cases undermining functioning water management systems, in others setting back needed water reform agendas, and in yet others becoming a tool to mask other agendas. Critically, the current monopoly of IWRM in global water management discourse is shutting out alternative thinking on pragmatic solutions to existing water problems. This paper explains these issues and uses examples of transboundary water governance in general, groundwater management in India and rural–urban water transfer in China to show that there are (sometimes antithetical) alternatives to IWRM which are being successfully used to solve major water problems. The main message is that we should simply get on with pragmatic politics and solutions to the world’s many individual water challenges. 2014-07-03 2015-03-17T14:39:52Z 2015-03-17T14:39:52Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/58364 en Open Access Informa UK Limited Giordano, Mark; Shah, Tushaar. 2014. From IWRM back to integrated water resources management. International Journal of Water Resources Development, 30(3):364-376. doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/07900627.2013.851521
spellingShingle water management
international waters
water governance
water allocation
water rates
groundwater management
river basins
Giordano, Mark
Shah, Tushaar
From IWRM back to integrated water resources management
title From IWRM back to integrated water resources management
title_full From IWRM back to integrated water resources management
title_fullStr From IWRM back to integrated water resources management
title_full_unstemmed From IWRM back to integrated water resources management
title_short From IWRM back to integrated water resources management
title_sort from iwrm back to integrated water resources management
topic water management
international waters
water governance
water allocation
water rates
groundwater management
river basins
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/58364
work_keys_str_mv AT giordanomark fromiwrmbacktointegratedwaterresourcesmanagement
AT shahtushaar fromiwrmbacktointegratedwaterresourcesmanagement