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Water Governance and Water Use Efficiency: The Five Principles of WUA Management and Performance in China1
Authors:Jinxia Wang  Jikun Huang  Lijuan Zhang  Qiuqiong Huang  Scott Rozelle
Institution:1. Respectively, Deputy Director and Professor (Wang), Director and Professor (J. Huang), Senior Research Assistant (Zhang) Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Institute of Geographical Sciences and Natural Resource Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China;2. Assistant Professor (Q. Huang), Department of Applied Economics, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 55108;3. Helen F. Farnsworth Senior Fellow (Rozelle), Food Security and the Environment Program, Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305 and Adjunct Professor in University of Waikato
Abstract:Wang, Jinxia, Jikun Huang, Lijuan Zhang, Qiuqiong Huang, and Scott Rozelle, 2010. Water Governance and Water Use Efficiency: The Five Principles of WUA Management and Performance in China. Journal of the American Water Resources Association (JAWRA) 46(4): 665-685. DOI: 10.1111/j.1752-1688.2010.00439.x Abstract: In recent years China has attempted to reform water management by decentralizing water management responsibilities. The overall goal of our paper is to better understand the emergence of water user associations (WUAs) in China and assess if they are adhering to the practices spelled out by the Five Principles, a set of recommended practices that are supposed to lead to successful WUA operation. Using four sets of different types of villages to examine implementation and performance, we find that World Bank-supported WUA villages (“Bank villages”) can be thought of as operating mostly according to the Five Principles. For example, the Bank villages were endowed with a more reliable water supply; were set up and were operating with a relatively high degree of farmer participation; and leaders were more consultative and the process more formal. When WUAs are run according to the Five Principals, we show that WUAs increase water use efficiency. The study also provides evidence that there is a perception in the Bank villages that water management is improving in general and that there is less conflict both within the village and among villages. Perhaps more importantly, we find that the Bank’s effort to promote WUAs extended beyond their own project villages. The openness, consultative nature, and transparency found in the Bank WUAs are also found (albeit at a somewhat lower level) in the non-Bank WUA villages.
Keywords:water user associations  water governance  evolution  performance  China
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