Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-12957-270118
Title: Assessing the institutional foundations of adaptive water governance in South India
Authors: Sechindra Vallury
Hoon Cheol Shin 
Marco A. Janssen
Ruth-Meinzen-Dick
Sandeep Kandikuppa
Kaushalendra R. Rao
Rahul Chaturvedi
Keywords: adaptive water governance
design principles
institutions
irrigation systems
qualitative comparative analysis
Issue Date: 1-Mar-2022
Publisher: Resilience Alliance
Citation: Sechindra Vallury, Hoon Cheol Shin, Marco A. Janssen, Ruth-Meinzen-Dick, Sandeep Kandikuppa, Kaushalendra R. Rao, Rahul Chaturvedi (2022-03-01). Assessing the institutional foundations of adaptive water governance in South India. Ecology and Society 27 (1) : 1-31. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-12957-270118
Abstract: Institutional structures can fundamentally shape opportunities for adaptive governance of water resources at multiple ecological and societal scales. The properties of adaptive governance have been widely examined in the literature. However, there has been limited focus on how institutions can promote or hinder the emergence of adaptive governance. Elinor Ostrom’s institutional theory stresses the importance of formal and informal norms and rules in effective governance of natural resources. Specifically, Ostrom’s “design principles” (DPs) are considered important because they increase the capacity for adaptive decision making and facilitate the emergence of self-organization at smaller scales. Self-organizing agents can frequently modify rules-in-use, procedures, and technical methods to tackle changing ecological conditions and address significant management issues left by more traditional governments. In this study, we examine institutional arrangements for successful water governance by analyzing (1) the co-occurrence of DPs in irrigation systems, and (2) the combination(s) of DPs leading to social and ecological success. We collaborated with a local non-profit organization to review institutional records and conduct interviews in 50 irrigation communities in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka in South India. Using qualitative comparative analysis, we found that the effectiveness of design principles is contingent on biophysical properties, such as the size of the watershed being governed, and attributes of the community, such as population size. We also discuss the methodological and data-related challenges involved in collecting primary data for conducting a context-specific institutional analysis. Our study offers a much-needed example of empirical research that investigates the role of operational level rules in adaptive water governance.
Source Title: Ecology and Society
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/216917
ISSN: 1708-3087
DOI: 10.5751/ES-12957-270118
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