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Informal privatisation of community taps: issues of access and equity
Authors:Pranita Bhushan Udas  Dik Roth  Margreet Zwarteveen
Affiliation:1. Water Resources Management Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlandspranitabhushan@gmail.com;3. Sociology of Development and Change Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands;4. Water Resources Management Group, Wageningen University and Water Governance Group, IHE-UNESCO, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Abstract:On the basis of a detailed case study this paper questions the equity of centralised piped drinking water supply systems installed by the government of Nepal in rural areas. The study shows how processes of socio-technical interaction and change alter the physical water supply infrastructure of the installed public water supply system, simultaneously altering patterns of access to taps and water. The analysis suggests that this happens through a process of “informal privatisation”, with community taps becoming appropriated by individuals over time, cutting off some families from their access to community tap water while reinforcing the water security of others. This process is deeply shaped by prevailing relations of power and cultural difference along axes of gender, caste and wealth.
Keywords:drinking water  water governance  privatisation  decentralisation  Nepal  gender
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