Negotiating water allocation rules in a government managed irrigation system: conflicts in Kirindi Oya
Paper presented at the Meeting of the International Association for the Study of Common Property, Berkeley, CA, USA, 5-8 June 1996
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Paper presented at the Meeting of the International Association for the Study of Common Property, Berkeley, CA, USA, 5-8 June 1996
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Paper presented at the Workshop on the Status of Irrigation Management Transfer in India, organised by Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, and International Irrigation Management Institute (IIMI), Colombo, 11-13 December 1995
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Explores the relationship of water distribution rules to water distribution performance in the Tambraparani Irrigation System in India. Argues that if water distribution rules do not match the irrigation services desired by the users, the users subvert the rules to provide the water deliveries they require, with negative impacts on water distribution performance and equity, and the cost of irrigation.
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In Shivakoti, G.; Varughese, G.; Ostrom, E.; Shukla, A.; Thapa, G. (Eds.), People and participation in sustainable development: Understanding the dynamics of natural resource systems: Proceedings of an International Conference, 17-21 March 1996, Institute of Agriculture and Animal Science, Tribhuvan University, Rampur, Chitwan, Nepal. Bloomington, IN, USA; Kathmandu, Nepal: Indiana University. Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis; Tribhuvan University. Institute of Agriculture and Animal Science
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Cancer and other noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) are now widely recognized as a threat to global development. The latest United Nations high-level meeting on NCDs reaffirmed this observation and also highlighted the slow progress in meeting the 2011 Political Declaration on the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases and the third Sustainable Development Goal. Lack of situational analyses, priority setting, and budgeting have been identified as major obstacles in achieving these goals. All of these have in common that they require information on the local cancer epidemiology. The Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study is uniquely poised to provide these crucial data.
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