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Title | ![]() |
Free-riders or victims: women's
nonparticipation in irrigation management in Nepal's
Chhattis Mauja irrigation scheme. (Research report, 21 pages) |
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Author | Margreet Zwarteveen and Nita Neupane | |||
Organisation | International Water Management Institute | |||
Year | 1996 | |||
Summary/ Introduction |
Although irrigated
farming at the head end of the Chhattis Mauja irrigation
scheme in Nepal is increasingly being done by women,
female farmers do not formally participate in the schemes
organization. However, womens non-involvement as
formal members in meetings and the lack of female
representation in the organization do not seem to
negatively affect their access to irrigation services. On
the contrary, women succeed extremely well in getting
their irrigation needs accommodated, in part because they
are not formally participating in the schemes
management. This allows them to take more water than they
are entitled to, as well as to contribute less labor to
maintenance than they should, without being punished.
Because women are not recognized as members, the
organization has difficulty enforcing its rules on women.
At the same time, female farmers cunningly make use of
the prevailing gender ideology, which pictures them as
weak and in need of protection. Although this ideology
does not reflect realities as perceived by women
themselves, it strengthens them in their negotiations for
more water and in their attempts to minimize their
contributions to the schemes maintenance. Previous studies attribute the successful performance of the Chhattis Mauja irrigation scheme to the fact that all users are involved in its management. This study shows that in the head end of the system, the group of users is not identical to the group of managers: women are the main users, but only men participate in the Chhattis Mauja organization. Although overall scheme management performance does not unduly suffer from the lack of users participation, the problems of free-riding and labor mobilization in the head end do create performance weaknesses. If feminization of agriculture continues to grow, these problems will become more widespread and threaten the sustainability of the whole irrigation scheme. |
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Complete
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