Abstract

Interest groups are omnipresent phenomena of most political societies. They are present because of their attempts to influence public policy and their representation role. These roles are fundamental agential roles. Through these roles interest groups can bring about changes in the water policy arena. This paper will look at some of these changes using the Lesotho Highlands Water Project Phase 1 as a case study. Through their actions to bring about change, interest groups are drivers of water politics. Interest groups can enhance water policies when they highlight the inherent deficiencies of policies and suggest alternatives for the betterment of policies concerning the welfare of individuals or groups as well as the environment. Water resource managers and decision-makers should therefore be aware of these actors and the roles they are likely to play when influencing aspects of water infrastructure projects. Interest groups can influence water policies even if they are only involved on an informal basis. In other words, governments do not have to go out of their way, so to speak, to involve interest groups; interest groups will come to the party, on their own volition. Said differently, interest groups usually become involved in water policy matters on a voluntary basis whether water policy makers like it or not.

Highlights

  • In this paper I investigate and report on the changes that interest groups can institute in the implementation of water projects

  • Over the past two decades, they have become transnationally involved in the South African water sector

  • The fact that more interest groups became involved in the hydropolitics of the Lesotho Highlands Water Project (LHWP) means that the project has been transnationalised

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Over the past two decades, they have become transnationally involved in the South African water sector It was interest groups from South Africa that have engaged governmental and parastatal institutions on matters pertaining to the water sector; groups from around the globe have participated. It is, important within the context of managing change in the South African water sector to analyse the transnational role and involvement of these actors in the water sector. I gathered the data for my Doctoral thesis with the title The Transnational Role and Involvement of Interest Groups in Water Politics: A Comparative Analysis of Selected Southern African Case Studies under the supervision of Prof Anton du Plessis at the University of Pretoria

Interest groups and their roles
Interest group type Characteristics
Agential roles within the broader generic categories
Engaging government
Actors and their interaction
Power Approach
Technocratic approach
Interest group involvement
Characteristics of change
CONCLUSION
Findings
Assistant agent
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