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Integrating research in water, food and environment. Challenge Program on Water and Food background paper 4
2002
Molden, David J. | Turral, Hugh | Amerasinghe, Felix P. | Sharma, Bharat R. | Hatibu, N. | Drechsel, Pay | van Koppen, Barbara | Wester, F. | Tharme, Rebecca E. | Raschid-Sally, Liqa | Samad, M. | Murray-Rust, Hammond | Shah, Tushaar | Acreman, M.C. | Smakhtin, Vladimir U. | Peden, Donald G. | Burton, M. | Albergel, J. | Meinzen-Dick, Ruth S. | Dunkhorst, B. | Merrey, Douglas J. | Mustafa, M. | Brown, D. | Dalton, J. | Flugel, W. | Gichuki, Francis N. | Harrington, Larry W. | Moustafa, M. | Samarasinghe, S. A. P. | Wallender, W. | Mohammed, A.
Integrating research in water, food and environment. Challenge Program on Water and Food background paper 4 全文
2002
Molden, D. | Turral, H. | Amerasinghe, F. | Sharma, B. R. | Hatibu, N. | Drechsel, P. | van Koppen, B. | Wester, F. | Tharme, R. | Raschid-Sally, L. | Samad, M. | Murray-Rust, H. | Shah, T. | Acreman, M. | Smakhtin, V. | Peden, D. | Burton, M. | Albergel, J. | Meinzen-Dick, R. | Dunkhorst, B. | Merrey, D. | Mustafa, M. | Brown, D. | Dalton, J. | Flugel, W. | Gichuki, F. | Harrington, L. | Moustafa, M. | Samarasinghe, S. A. P. | Wallender, W. | Mohammed, A.
Water, food and poverty in river basins: defining the limits
2014
Fisher, Myles J. | Cook, Simon E.
Water, food and poverty in river basins: defining the limits 全文
2012
Fisher, Myles J. | Cook, Simon E.
Sustainable groundwater management in India needs a water-energy-food nexus approach 全文
2022
Mukherji, Aditi
Groundwater depletion in India is a result of water, energy, and food policies that have given rise to a nexus where growth in agriculture has been supported by unsustainable trends in water and energy use. This nexus emanates from India’s policy of providing affordable calories to its large population. This requires that input prices are kept low, leading to perverse incentives that encourage groundwater overexploitation. The paper argues that solutions to India’s groundwater problems need to be embedded within the current context of its water-energy-food nexus. Examples are provided of changes underway in some water-energy-food policies that may halt further groundwater depletion.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Sustainable groundwater management in India needs a water-energy-food nexus approach
2020
Mukherji, Aditi
Governing to grow enough food without enough water?second best solutions show the way 全文
2010
David, S. | Lautze, Jonathan F. | Shah, Tushaar | Bin, D. | Giordano, Mark | Sanford, Luke
As economies develop and societies change, emerging sets of challenges are placed on water resources and its governance. Population growth and economic development tend to drive the demand for more water, and push river basins into situations of scarcity. Agriculture, globally the largest user of water, is a major driver of water scarcity, and also the sector that has to bear the consequences of scarcity. Yet governance arrangements the world over have difficulty coming to grips with the management of agricultural water within the larger water resource context. The four major agricultural water governance challenges are: to manage transitions from abundance to scarcity; to deal with the large informal sectors of the agricultural water economy; to adapt to the changing objectives of society; and within each of these challenges, to craft contextspecific solutions. This paper presents examples of these challenges and uses them to derive a conceptual framework to help us understand present agricultural water-use contexts, and to develop context specific solutions. The framework is based on two important and shifting contextual dimensions: the degree of scarcity within a basin, and the degree of formality in water use. Looking at agricultural water governance within this framework shows that some standard prescriptions for water problems may not always be appropriate and that 'second best' solutions can in fact be the best way forward. The challenge for governance is to facilitate the development of these solutions.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Governing to Grow Enough Food without Enough Water?Second Best Solutions Show the Way 全文
2010
luke sanford | mark giordano | jonathan lautze | tushaar shah | david molden | dong bin
As economies develop and societies change, emerging sets of challenges are placed on water resources and its governance. Population growth and economic development tend to drive the demand for more water, and push river basins into situations of scarcity. Agriculture, globally the largest user of water, is a major driver of water scarcity, and also the sector that has to bear the consequences of scarcity. Yet governance arrangements the world over have difficulty coming to grips with the management of agricultural water within the larger water resource context. The four major agricultural water governance challenges are: to manage transitions from abundance to scarcity; to deal with the large informal sectors of the agricultural water economy; to adapt to the changing objectives of society; and within each of these challenges, to craft contextspecific solutions. This paper presents examples of these challenges and uses them to derive a conceptual framework to help us understand present agricultural water-use contexts, and to develop context specific solutions. The framework is based on two important and shifting contextual dimensions: the degree of scarcity within a basin, and the degree of formality in water use. Looking at agricultural water governance within this framework shows that some standard prescriptions for water problems may not always be appropriate and that â??second bestâ?? solutions can in fact be the best way forward. The challenge for governance is to facilitate the development of these solutions | David Molden et al., 'Governing to Grow Enough Food without Enough Water?Second Best Solutions Show the Way', International Journal of Water Resources Development, vol. 26(2), pp.249-263, Informa UK Limited, 2010
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Innovative approaches to agricultural water use for improving food security in Sub- Saharan Africa 全文
2002
Inocencio, Arlene B. | Sally, Hilmy | Merrey, Douglas J.
Governing to grow enough food without enough water?second best solutions show the way 全文
2010
David, S. | Lautze, Jonathan F. | Shah, Tushaar | Bin, D. | Giordano, Mark | Sanford, Luke
As economies develop and societies change, emerging sets of challenges are placed on water resources and its governance. Population growth and economic development tend to drive the demand for more water, and push river basins into situations of scarcity. Agriculture, globally the largest user of water, is a major driver of water scarcity, and also the sector that has to bear the consequences of scarcity. Yet governance arrangements the world over have difficulty coming to grips with the management of agricultural water within the larger water resource context. The four major agricultural water governance challenges are: to manage transitions from abundance to scarcity; to deal with the large informal sectors of the agricultural water economy; to adapt to the changing objectives of society; and within each of these challenges, to craft contextspecific solutions. This paper presents examples of these challenges and uses them to derive a conceptual framework to help us understand present agricultural water-use contexts, and to develop context specific solutions. The framework is based on two important and shifting contextual dimensions: the degree of scarcity within a basin, and the degree of formality in water use. Looking at agricultural water governance within this framework shows that some standard prescriptions for water problems may not always be appropriate and that 'second best' solutions can in fact be the best way forward. The challenge for governance is to facilitate the development of these solutions.
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