Integrating “livelihoods” into integrated water resources management: taking the integration paradigm to its logical next step for developing countries

This paper examines the weaknesses in the current understanding of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) from the perspective of livelihoods. Empowering poor people, reducing poverty, improving livelihoods, and promoting economic growth ought to be the basic objectives of IWRM. But as current...

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Veröffentlicht in:Regional environmental change 2005-12, Vol.5 (4), p.197-204
Hauptverfasser: Merrey, D. J., Drechsel, P., de Vries, F. W. T. Penning, Sally, H.
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container_end_page 204
container_issue 4
container_start_page 197
container_title Regional environmental change
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creator Merrey, D. J.
Drechsel, P.
de Vries, F. W. T. Penning
Sally, H.
description This paper examines the weaknesses in the current understanding of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) from the perspective of livelihoods. Empowering poor people, reducing poverty, improving livelihoods, and promoting economic growth ought to be the basic objectives of IWRM. But as currently understood and used, IWRM often tends to focus on second-generation issues such as cost recovery, reallocation of water to "higher value" uses, and environmental conservation. This paper argues that IWRM needs to be placed in the broader context of both modern Integrated Natural Resource Management (INRM) and the livelihoods approach, which together take a holistic and people-centered approach. The paper concludes with an alternative definition of IWRM as involving the promotion of human welfare, especially the reduction of poverty, encouragement of better livelihoods and balanced economic growth through effective democratic development and management of water and other natural resources in an integrated multilevel framework that is as equitable, sustainable, and transparent as possible, and conserves vital ecosystems. Transparent user-friendly information and models for assisting decision making are essential features of livelihood-oriented IWRM.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10113-004-0088-5
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subjects Developing countries
Economic growth
Economics
LDCs
Natural resource management
Poverty
Studies
Water resources management
Water shortages
title Integrating “livelihoods” into integrated water resources management: taking the integration paradigm to its logical next step for developing countries
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