Agricultural water management in a water stressed catchment: lessons from the RIPARWIN Project

In the face of growing water stress and increasing concerns over the sustainability of water use, Tanzania has, in common with many other countries in Africa, focused largely on the development of more integrated catchment-wide approaches to water management. In the Great Ruaha River Basin, considerable effort has gone into increasing water productivity and the promotion of mechanisms for more efficient allocation of water resources. Over a period of five years, the RIPARWIN project investigated water management in the basin and evaluated the effectiveness of some of the mechanisms that have been introduced. The study findings are relevant to basins in developing countries where there is competition for water and irrigation is one of the main uses.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McCartney, Matthew P., Lankford, B.A., Mahoo, H.F.
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: International Water Management Institute 2007
Subjects:river basin management, water stress, irrigation programs, irrigation management, irrigation efficiency, water use, water allocation, wetlands, water rights, water law, economic aspects, water rates, user charges, water users associations, decision support tools,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/39903
https://www.iwmi.cgiar.org/Publications/IWMI_Research_Reports/PDF/Pub116/RR116.pdf
https://doi.org/10.3910/2009.116
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-399032023-09-23T17:51:47Z Agricultural water management in a water stressed catchment: lessons from the RIPARWIN Project McCartney, Matthew P. Lankford, B.A. Mahoo, H.F. river basin management water stress irrigation programs irrigation management irrigation efficiency water use water allocation wetlands water rights water law economic aspects water rates user charges water users associations decision support tools In the face of growing water stress and increasing concerns over the sustainability of water use, Tanzania has, in common with many other countries in Africa, focused largely on the development of more integrated catchment-wide approaches to water management. In the Great Ruaha River Basin, considerable effort has gone into increasing water productivity and the promotion of mechanisms for more efficient allocation of water resources. Over a period of five years, the RIPARWIN project investigated water management in the basin and evaluated the effectiveness of some of the mechanisms that have been introduced. The study findings are relevant to basins in developing countries where there is competition for water and irrigation is one of the main uses. 2007 2014-06-13T14:29:39Z 2014-06-13T14:29:39Z Report McCartney, Matthew P.; Lankford, B. A.; Mahoo, H. 2007. Agricultural water management in a water stressed catchment: lessons from the RIPARWIN Project. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). 46p. (IWMI Research Report 116) doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.3910/2009.116 978-92-9090-670-4 1026-0862 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/39903 https://www.iwmi.cgiar.org/Publications/IWMI_Research_Reports/PDF/Pub116/RR116.pdf https://doi.org/10.3910/2009.116 en IWMI Research Report Copyrighted; all rights reserved Open Access application/pdf International Water Management Institute
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic river basin management
water stress
irrigation programs
irrigation management
irrigation efficiency
water use
water allocation
wetlands
water rights
water law
economic aspects
water rates
user charges
water users associations
decision support tools
river basin management
water stress
irrigation programs
irrigation management
irrigation efficiency
water use
water allocation
wetlands
water rights
water law
economic aspects
water rates
user charges
water users associations
decision support tools
spellingShingle river basin management
water stress
irrigation programs
irrigation management
irrigation efficiency
water use
water allocation
wetlands
water rights
water law
economic aspects
water rates
user charges
water users associations
decision support tools
river basin management
water stress
irrigation programs
irrigation management
irrigation efficiency
water use
water allocation
wetlands
water rights
water law
economic aspects
water rates
user charges
water users associations
decision support tools
McCartney, Matthew P.
Lankford, B.A.
Mahoo, H.F.
Agricultural water management in a water stressed catchment: lessons from the RIPARWIN Project
description In the face of growing water stress and increasing concerns over the sustainability of water use, Tanzania has, in common with many other countries in Africa, focused largely on the development of more integrated catchment-wide approaches to water management. In the Great Ruaha River Basin, considerable effort has gone into increasing water productivity and the promotion of mechanisms for more efficient allocation of water resources. Over a period of five years, the RIPARWIN project investigated water management in the basin and evaluated the effectiveness of some of the mechanisms that have been introduced. The study findings are relevant to basins in developing countries where there is competition for water and irrigation is one of the main uses.
format Report
topic_facet river basin management
water stress
irrigation programs
irrigation management
irrigation efficiency
water use
water allocation
wetlands
water rights
water law
economic aspects
water rates
user charges
water users associations
decision support tools
author McCartney, Matthew P.
Lankford, B.A.
Mahoo, H.F.
author_facet McCartney, Matthew P.
Lankford, B.A.
Mahoo, H.F.
author_sort McCartney, Matthew P.
title Agricultural water management in a water stressed catchment: lessons from the RIPARWIN Project
title_short Agricultural water management in a water stressed catchment: lessons from the RIPARWIN Project
title_full Agricultural water management in a water stressed catchment: lessons from the RIPARWIN Project
title_fullStr Agricultural water management in a water stressed catchment: lessons from the RIPARWIN Project
title_full_unstemmed Agricultural water management in a water stressed catchment: lessons from the RIPARWIN Project
title_sort agricultural water management in a water stressed catchment: lessons from the riparwin project
publisher International Water Management Institute
publishDate 2007
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/39903
https://www.iwmi.cgiar.org/Publications/IWMI_Research_Reports/PDF/Pub116/RR116.pdf
https://doi.org/10.3910/2009.116
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