Title:
Access to water and related resources in Ngamiland, Botswana: Toward a more critical perspective and sustainable approach
Publication Year:
2006
Abstract:
Governance structures in Botswana are highly centralized and top-down in orientation. For water and related resources management in rural areas, this creates particular difficulties - from lack of decision-making capacity to limited human and financial capital at the level of the resource base. In Ngamiland, government is currently undertaking the Okavango Delta Management Plan project as part of its commitment to the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands. The project purports to develop an integrated management plan based on an ecosystems approach. Meaningful participation by local people is a requirement of the process. Data from 43 village meetings undertaken under the auspices of the ODMP process reveal that local people's access to their resource base is diminishing. Information from key informant interviews and a variety of government documents, however, suggests that policy makers are either unaware of or uninterested in this growing problem. Although citizens and government are engaged in an on-going dialogue, there is little evidence to suggest that policy and practice are moving towardsustainable solutions for all. This article highlights these issues in the hope that amore meaningful dialogue among all stakeholders may be undertaken. Keywords: Okavango River Basin, Ngamiland, Governance, Sustainable resource use, Integrated water resources management, Access, Livelihoods.
Publication Title:
Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Parts A/B/C
Volume:
31
Issue:
15-16
Pages:
659-668
Item Type:
Journal Article
Language:
en

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