Abstract

The paper examines the nature and development of the participatory water institutions in the eastern Indo-Gangetic plains of India, focusing on the aspects of structure, participation, and devolution. Though the physical development of irrigation has made considerable progress in India, the proper management and distribution of water has poised many difficulties. The consequences of this are poor efficiency in water use, inequity in distribution, disputes, high cost, and substantial under-utilization of the potential created. On the other hand, institutional initiatives that aim to improve water management and distribution are seen in some areas/locations, and show a process of arriving at better institutional arrangements. Water institutions are crucial for eastern India and though there are a few examples of spontaneous bottom-up initiatives, much of this development is driven by external interventions including laws, policies, and government programs. Even though under the government interventions, the guidelines and policies are usually uniform and top-down, the local uptake and adoption show substantial variation and divergence and this deserves study. The research is based on review of the literature as well as on six in-depth case studies, and also responses of 510 households involved with 51 participatory water institutions in the setting of the eastern Indo-Gangetic plains states of Assam and Bihar. The paper first takes a brief look at the literature on the foundations and experiences of participatory irrigation management (PIM), and then examines through the case studies and data, the development and variation in the PIM water institution in the given setting. It examines features such as laws, membership, structure, inclusion, participation/involvement and devolution. It finds that inclusion of various groups of people in the institutions is quite good except for women and youth. However, actual involvement of different people varies substantially. The issue of devolution/decentralization versus centralization in decision-making is very important to PIM, and varies across the structure and functions. The association of involvement and devolution to performance indicates that the active involvement of some functionaries and groups is very important, and that devolution in several decisions can considerably enhance performance. The observations provide many useful insights for policy and institutional design which can help improve water resource management in the eastern Indo-Gangetic plains.

Highlights

  • This paper examines the evolution and characteristics of the water institutions in eastern India, focusing on the aspects of structure, participation, and devolution

  • The various cases show that the effectiveness of participatory irrigation management (PIM) varies substantially, and is influenced by many factors such as the impact of good examples, involvement of experts, education/literacy, farmer initiative, inspirational leadership, alignment of government support with farmer initiatives, entrepreneurial culture of certain communities, strong enforcement of compliance, the use of media to create pressure, and the sharing of water fees collected with the water user associations (WUAs) for motivating PIM and timely repairs and maintenance

  • Even the landless/tenants are included significantly in the WUAs, but the inclusion of women is very low. This is higher in Bihar given that it is mandated in the PIM directives which make it compulsory to have at least one women representative in the WUA executive

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Summary

Introduction

This paper examines the evolution and characteristics of the water institutions in eastern India, focusing on the aspects of structure, participation, and devolution. The primary aims behind devolution of irrigation management include greater user participation, increased collective action, better, and sustainable and equitable outcomes. Shah [2] finds that capacity building through investing time and resources by an NGO resulted in considerable success of WUAs. Zhou [19] finds that integrating local contexts in rules, regulations and expectation is crucial for participatory irrigation management (PIM). Zhou [19] finds that integrating local contexts in rules, regulations and expectation is crucial for participatory irrigation management (PIM) In this perspective, even though there are broad guidelines and an overall thrust towards PIM nationally in India, since water is a state subject, different states have evolved their own laws, regulations and systems for PIM

Mandated Institutional Framework in Assam and Bihar
PIM in the Two States and its Institution Structure
Organization
Khairani WUA—Jopadong Pagladia No 2 Group Bund Dong Committee
Paliganj WUA—Paliganj Viratni Krishak Samiti
Jetwalia WUA—Jetwalia Upviratni Krishak Samiti
Schedule Tribes
1: Percentage Respondents Indicating that They Are Included
27. Tail Reach Farmers
Assessment of the Performance of the Water-User Associations
10. Regression Analysis
Findings
11. Conclusions
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