Integrated water resources management, institutions and livelihoods under stress : bottom-up perspectives from Zimbabwe / Collin Calvin Mabiza.

Author
Mabiza, Collin Calvin, 1972- [Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Εdition
1st ed.
Published/​Created
Boca Raton, FL : CRC Press, 2018.
Description
1 online resource (200 p.)

Details

Subject(s)
Summary note
The majority of people in Limpopo river basin depend on rainfed agriculture. Unfortunately the Limpopo is water scarce, and parts of the basin, such as Zimbabwe's Mzingwane catchment, are under stress in terms of agro-ecological and socio-politicoeconomic conditions. Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) has been adopted in the river basin in an attempt to improve water resources management. However, it is not known whether, or how, IWRM has improved practices in water resources management and contributed towards improved livelihoods. This study used a bottom-up approach to analyse water management practices and livelihoods in the river basin. The objective of the study was to understand practices in water resources management at the local level, and what drives those practices. Specifically the study analysed: practices in access to water for domestic and productive uses, efforts at sustaining livelihoods and the environment, water management for agriculture, contestations over urban water services, and river basin planning. The study showed the importance of context as a driver of practices in water resources management. The demonstrated influence of local level drivers on water resources management and livelihoods suggest that the challenges in water resources management cannot be solved outside of the wider socio-politico-economic realm. The majority of people in Limpopo river basin depend on rainfed agriculture. Unfortunately the Limpopo is water scarce, and parts of the basin, such as Zimbabwe's Mzingwane catchment, are under stress in terms of agro-ecological and socio-politicoeconomic conditions. Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) has been adopted in the river basin in an attempt to improve water resources management. However, it is not known whether, or how, IWRM has improved practices in water resources management and contributed towards improved livelihoods. This study used a bottom-up approach to analyse water management practices and livelihoods in the river basin. The objective of the study was to understand practices in water resources management at the local level, and what drives those practices. Specifically the study analysed: practices in access to water for domestic and productive uses, efforts at sustaining livelihoods and the environment, water management for agriculture, contestations over urban water services, and river basin planning. The study showed the importance of context as a driver of practices in water resources management. The demonstrated influence of local level drivers on water resources management and livelihoods suggest that the challenges in water resources management cannot be solved outside of the wider socio-politico-economic realm.
Notes
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references.
Source of description
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ebrary, viewed January 6, 2016).
Language note
English
Contents
1. Introduction 2: An overview of water resources management in Zimbabwe 3: Integrated Water Resources Management and livelihoods: do they meet? 4: Dynamics and complexities of practices in local water management in Zimbabwe in the IWRM era 5: Livelihood strategies and environmental management in the Zhulube micro-catchment 6: Sowing seeds of hope: the case of conservation agriculture in the smallholder farming sector 7: Contestations and coalitions in urban water supply: the state, the city and the politics of water in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe 8: Processes in river basin planning: the case of the Limpopo river basin in Zimbabwe 9: Conclusions and Recommendations
ISBN
  • 0-429-21266-6
  • 1-138-47519-X
  • 0-203-76707-1
OCLC
1080589163
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