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Social power,water control and irrigation systems
Authors:James J. Layton  Frank A. Santopolo  Mohamed Naguib
Affiliation:(1) 608 N. Chestnut Dr., 80538 Loveland, Colorado, USA;(2) Department of Sociology, Colorado State University, 80523 Ft. Collins, Colorado, USA;(3) Water Research Center, Ministry of Public Works and Water Resources, Cairo, Egypt
Abstract:The principal finding of the study is that social power positions held by Egyptian farmers sharings a common watercourse do not have significant influence in the farmer's ability to control irrigation water distribution. Other variables used to describe irrigation management; location on the water course and farmers' use of more than one source of water to irrigate; also do not yield any explanations as to why particular farmers have more control over their irrigation than others. Farmers who have more control are less likely to be affected by other farmers' actions, physical problems on delivery canals, breakdown in pumps, and government officials actions. While differences in irrigation control among farmers exist, no single cause is identified. Two explanations for the findings are (1) water control is sufficient for a large percentage of Egyptian farmers, and (2) adequately explaining irrigation behavior cannot be done with separate variables.Deceased
Keywords:farmer-farmer relations  farmer-government relations  irrigation system  water management
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