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Jalyatra: Exploring India's traditional water management systems

Cover PageJalyatra - Exploring India's traditional water management systems, by Nitya Jacob is an ecological travelogue that looks at links between water, society and places. It places water resources in the local environmental and social context. It describes in detail what existed, how it fitted into the socio-cultural milieu and was appropriate for the local climate and geography. It then examines reasons for their decline, as indeed most have, in recent decades.

While recording the dismal state of traditional systems, the author stumbles upon small initiatives that have brought about significant transformation across regions. It refers to noisy hidrums and gharaats, the river-run flour mills of Uttaranchal, the technologies whose potential has yet to be fully realised. It looks at water harvesting structures of southern India—the eris and ooranis. However, it admits that the average person is singularly uninterested in protecting the environment.

Jalyatra captures the efforts of NGOs and enlightened individuals striving to revive these systems. It makes the case for a mass movement to revive traditional water management systems, especially village ponds, across the country as the way to ensure water security in India. In Chambal, the author meets Brij Mohan Gujjar, dacoit turned water conservationist, who is doing valuable work on the check dams designed to control the flow of water in the ravines; and in Shillong, Lan Potham shows him the uses of the easily available bamboo to construct the shyngiar which irrigates his areca nut plantation.

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Location

Delhi, DL, India
Latitude: 28.635308, Longitude: 77.224960

Future water solutions for India - A paper by Himanshu Thakkar in the Palgrave Development journal

This paper by Himanshu Thakkar published in the journal Development looks at the daunting challenges that future water demand places on India and the possible solutions to address these probelems. The challenges that the paper highlights includes:Read More

  • Increase in population, industralisation and urbanisation
  • Increase in food grain demand
  • Increased demand for water
  • Increase in power demand
  • Lack of access to sanitation, water, electricity for majority of the population
  • Challenges due to climate change leading to increase in natural disaters such as floods, droughts, destruction of environment
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Future water solutions for India - Himanshu Thakkar - Development (2008)69.96 KB

Introduction to Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) - Open courseware from the United Nations University (UNU)

Introduction to IWRM (UNU)This introductory course on Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM), from the United Nations University (UNU), provides a brief historical background and overview of IWRM and gives an overview of the various aspects of IWRM, from integration, capacity building to applications and case studies.Read More

IWRM has been defined by the Global Water Partnership (2000) as a process, which promotes the coordinated development and management of water, land and related resources in order to maximize the resultant economic and social welfare in an equitable manner without compromising the sustainability of vital ecosystems. An important aspect of any IWRM program is therefore, research, planning and action at the river basin level.

Apotheosis of water and its inevitability in Indian culture - Paper presented at the National Seminar on Water and Culture (2007)

This paper highlights the role and value of water in ancient times. The author begins with analysing the discussion on water in the Rig Veda and it's deification.Read More

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Apotheosis of water and its inevitability in Indian culture - I - Paper presented at the National Seminar on Water and Culture (2007)121.27 KB
Apotheosis of water and its inevitability in Indian culture - II - Paper presented at the National Seminar on Water and Culture (2007)89.42 KB

Location

Hampi, KA, India
Latitude: 15.333333, Longitude: 76.466667

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Role of Self Help Groups in Promoting Hand Washing - Experiences; Referrals

From Adam Talsma, People's Action for Clean Hands (PANCH), Agra

Posted 12 November 2010

I work for People's Action for Clean Hands (PANCH) in Agra, Uttar Pradesh. We are working on a pilot hand washing project funded by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA.

PANCH (temporary website available at http://web.mit.edu/panch/index.html) has designed a training programme and a set of low-cost technologies to facilitate slum-dwelling women’s Self Help Groups (SHGs) to design, produce and sell their own hand washing solutions. The year-long pilot will be launched in December 2010 in partnership with the local NGO, Shri Nirotilal Buddha Sansthan (SNBS). Read More

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Role of Self Help Groups in Promoting Hand Washing - Experiences; Referrals253.89 KB

Right to drinking water in India - A Working Paper by Centre for Economic and Social Studies

This working paper by Centre for Economic and Social Studies (CESS), Hyderabad deals with the issue of right to drinking water, an issue that has assumed greater significance in India in recent years. Declarations by the United Nations and other international organisations, and judicial pronouncements by the Supreme Court of India from time to time that right to water is part of right to life as per Article 21 of the Constitution of India have, among others, contributed to the growing awareness on this issue.Read More

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Right to drinking water in India by CESS (2004)81.21 KB

A framework for India’s water policy - Economic and Political Weekly

This article published in the Economic and Political Weekly begins by arguing that India’s annually renewable water resources are finite and are subject to uncertain climatic variability and that these resources need to be systematically monitored and managed to meet the needs of a diverse society.Read More

India will thus benefit from a unifying national water policy that combines scientific knowledge of India’s water resource systems with the nation’s democratic ideals so as to achieve an equitable sharing of this vital resource among all segments of society.

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A Framework for India's Water Policy - Economic and Political Weekly (2010)314.59 KB

Preparation of Strategic Plan for Drinking Water by DDWS: Assessing the Current Situation - Advice

From Bharat Lal, Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation, Ministry of Rural Development, Government of India, New Delhi

Posted 1 July 2010

This is the second in the series of three queries the Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation (DDWS), Ministry of Rural Development, Government of India, is posing to the community to seek inputs for the strategic plan for rural drinking water up to the year 2022. The first query dealt with the aspirations, purposes and functions of DDWS and we thank you all for the responses. As mentioned earlier, the focus now is on a community-led flexible approach that accommodates the local geo-hydrological, climate and cultural variations. There is a strong emphasis on community mobilization for creating a demand for better water supply. This is carried forward in the proposed new strategic plan for drinking water.Read More

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Preparation of Strategic Plan for Drinking Water by DDWS: Assessing the Current Situation304.32 KB
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6.22-2011.07.01-06