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ID121108
Title ProperLosing water in a fight for land
Other Title Informationexamining water access amidst land acquisition in Northwest India
LanguageENG
AuthorSteinberg, Nik C
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper presents the experiences of 22 displaced families and their battle for water access based on a pilot survey of Manesar, in the northern Indian state of Haryana. Interviews were conducted in the summer of 2011 to examine a water regime recently transformed by compulsory land acquisition and displacement in one of India's driest and fastest growing areas. This dimension of the land acquisition and displacement narrative is a response to the crisis over resource access and control in peri-urban India where a burgeoning demand for land, water, and capital has sparked contentious debates over fairness and equity. Despite recent amendments to the Land Acquisition Act of 1894, long-standing questions regarding compensation and rehabilitation for drinking water services remain unanswered. The findings of this paper show that there may be limits to halting the effects of land displacement altogether without aggressive legislation capping water grabs, or a radical shift in the way in which water is valued and redistributed to the landless. Conventional alternatives to fulfilling drinking water needs, designed by and for the less poor, such as bottled water, private water tankers, water permit systems, or even land redistribution are likely to exacerbate already limited access, rather than improve it. A number of mitigation techniques are explored, including those inherent to common property resources (CPR), which may ensure access to safe drinking water is maintained.
`In' analytical NoteContemporary South Asia Vol. 21, No.2; Jun 2013: p.148-168
Journal SourceContemporary South Asia Vol. 21, No.2; Jun 2013: p.148-168
Key WordsAccess ;  Common Property Resources (CPR) ;  Compensation ;  Displacement ;  Drinking Water ;  Haryana ;  Land Acquisition ;  Peri - Urban ;  Risk ;  Water Grabs


 
 
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