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People's Participation in Managing Common Pool Natural Resources: Lessons of Success in India

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Type: Conference Paper
Author: Singh, Katar
Conference: Common Property Conference, the Second Biennial Conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property
Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba
Conf. Date: September 26-30, 1991
Date: 1991
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/689
Sector: General & Multiple Resources
Land Tenure & Use
Forestry
Region: Middle East & South Asia
Subject(s): common pool resources
resource management
co-management
participatory management
water resources
forest management
IASC
Abstract: "This paper presents a critical review and analysis of five selected successful cases of common pool natural resources management in India and, based on the analysis done, identifies major determinants of people's participation in development and management of common pool natural resources. The term, people's participation, is used to mean the act of partaking by local people in all stages of common pool natural resources development and management programmes right from designing of various resource development and conservation structures through monitoring and evaluation of their performance and impact. The case study method of research was used to explore the major determinants of people's participation. The findings of the research are generalised to the theory of collective action as developed by Mancur Olson (1971) and James M. Buchanan and Gordon Tullock (1965). "The five success stories selected for the study were : the Parwara Van (Forest) Panchayat in Uttar Pradesh, the Arabari Experiment in joint forest management in West Bengal, the Ralegan-Siddhi project in micro-watershed development in Maharashtra, the Sukhomajri project in micro-watershed development in Haryana, and the Mohini Water Co-operative in Gujarat. The case study revealed that the major determinants of people's participation in development and management of common pool natural resources were: substantial excess of expected private benefits from participation over the expected private costs of participation; high stakes of local people in the resource(s), organisation of local people in small groups; honest and good local leadership, existence and enforcement by the people involved of rules for regulation of resource use and for fair and equitable distribution of benefits from collective action; legal back up of the rules; involvement of non-governmental organisations in organising, educating, training, and motivating the people; and willingness and ability of government to provide needed financial and technical support."

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