Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Why is Gender Equity a Concern for Water Management?
- 2 Negotiating Gender Equity through Decentralised Water Management in Coastal Gujarat: The Case of UTTHAN
- 3 SEWA: Campaigning for Water, Women and Work
- 4 Mainstreaming Gender Concerns in Participatory Irrigation Management: The Role of AKRSP(I) in South Gujarat
- 5 Water Women: Managing Community Lift Irrigation Systems in Jharkhand
- 6 Looking Back, Thinking Forward: The Khudawadi Experience with Access to Irrigation for Women and the Landless
- 7 Flowing Upstream: Towards Gender Just, Equitable and Empowering Water Management
- About the Authors
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Annexure
- Glossary
- Resources
- Index
Annexure
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Why is Gender Equity a Concern for Water Management?
- 2 Negotiating Gender Equity through Decentralised Water Management in Coastal Gujarat: The Case of UTTHAN
- 3 SEWA: Campaigning for Water, Women and Work
- 4 Mainstreaming Gender Concerns in Participatory Irrigation Management: The Role of AKRSP(I) in South Gujarat
- 5 Water Women: Managing Community Lift Irrigation Systems in Jharkhand
- 6 Looking Back, Thinking Forward: The Khudawadi Experience with Access to Irrigation for Women and the Landless
- 7 Flowing Upstream: Towards Gender Just, Equitable and Empowering Water Management
- About the Authors
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Annexure
- Glossary
- Resources
- Index
Summary
The operational logistics of the PIM mechanism
Farmers' participation is elicited at each step of water distribution and its management. From each reservoir/dam there is a head regulator that opens and shuts the gate which leaves water in the “major” (main) canal. A number of “minors” are dug on this major which serve to take water closer to the villages. These too are lined and are concretised. The maintenance and upkeep of the major is the state's responsibility while that of the minor is the responsibility of the farmers' organisation/water users association as the case may be. Regular maintenance of a minor involves desilting, weeding etc. Each farmer thereafter builds field channels to take water to his field and is responsible for digging and maintaining it as such.
PIM involves creating people's institutions to manage the resource. So usually there is a Canal Irrigation Society comprising of all the beneficiaries of the entire command area which could range from two villages to twelve. From this society 2-3 persons from each minor are elected to be part of the Executive Committee that takes the responsibility for water distribution and management and the daily upkeep and maintenance of the system. This committee is elected at the annual general body meeting of the Canal Irrigation Society. Usually each minor also has its own society with a minor leader.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Flowing UpstreamEmpowering Women through Water Management Initiatives in India, pp. 242 - 243Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2005