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The Politics of PVC: Technology and Institutions in Upland Water Management in Northern Thailand

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Type: Journal Article
Author: Badenoch, Nathan
Journal: Water Alternatives
Volume: 2
Page(s): 269‐288
Date: 2009
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/6342
Sector: Water Resource & Irrigation
Region: Middle East & South Asia
Subject(s): water management
adaptive systems
irrigation
institutional analysis
Abstract: "Conflict over water has grown in the mountainous areas of Thailand since the replacement of opium with alternative crops. PVC‐sprinkler irrigation has enabled dry‐season expansion of these cash crops on sloping lands, intensifying demand for water when it is most scarce. The technology and institutions that form the backbone of these irrigation systems have evolved simultaneously in a process of adaptive governance, in which local farmers draw on local social resources to balance competition and cooperation. Common conceptions of upstream – downstream conflict, pitting Thai against ethnic minorities in a struggle for resources, dominate the discourse of watersheds in Thailand. Upland water users themselves are diverse and their resource management systems are dynamic, even if they are not recognised as legitimate users of water. Understanding how upland communities create local systems of resource governance through dry‐season irrigation is highly relevant for governance at higher levels, such as in the efforts to establish watershed networks and river basin organisations."

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