Community participation in rural water supply

Few rural communities in the developing world can have experienced such profound changes as have occured in Ethiopia since the revolution in 1974. The economy of the country is still based on agriculture but the former feudal structure has been transformed by sweeping land reform which put the means...

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Main Author: Michael Wood
Format: Default Conference proceeding
Published: 1991
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/29072
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spelling rr-article-95977701991-01-01T00:00:00Z Community participation in rural water supply Michael Wood (4609180) untagged Few rural communities in the developing world can have experienced such profound changes as have occured in Ethiopia since the revolution in 1974. The economy of the country is still based on agriculture but the former feudal structure has been transformed by sweeping land reform which put the means of production more in the hands of peasant farmers. Coupled with this development were radical changes in local government, with up to 25,000 Peasant Associations being formed. With the formation of other mass organizations, the rural population is now highly politicized. The Government, following a Marxist-­Leninist line, has always stressed the involvement of the community in their own development. This has included the development of rural water supplies. Ethiopia has been pre-eminent in the region in establishing a Community Participation Promotion Service within the agency responsible for the maintenance of rural water services. However, a recent survey in the Southern Region found that 30% of rural waterpoints were not functioning, and that only half of the communities with improved water supplies had a water committee to manage improved water systems (ref.1). This paper focuses on the situation in the Southern Region and will seek to explain why many rural water supply systems have not been sustainable, despite the emphasis that the government places on community involvement. Measures now being implemented to increase sustainability through more active and pragmatic community participation and through the use of appropriate technology will also be discussed. 1991-01-01T00:00:00Z Text Conference contribution 2134/29072 https://figshare.com/articles/conference_contribution/Community_participation_in_rural_water_supply/9597770 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
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Michael Wood
Community participation in rural water supply
description Few rural communities in the developing world can have experienced such profound changes as have occured in Ethiopia since the revolution in 1974. The economy of the country is still based on agriculture but the former feudal structure has been transformed by sweeping land reform which put the means of production more in the hands of peasant farmers. Coupled with this development were radical changes in local government, with up to 25,000 Peasant Associations being formed. With the formation of other mass organizations, the rural population is now highly politicized. The Government, following a Marxist-­Leninist line, has always stressed the involvement of the community in their own development. This has included the development of rural water supplies. Ethiopia has been pre-eminent in the region in establishing a Community Participation Promotion Service within the agency responsible for the maintenance of rural water services. However, a recent survey in the Southern Region found that 30% of rural waterpoints were not functioning, and that only half of the communities with improved water supplies had a water committee to manage improved water systems (ref.1). This paper focuses on the situation in the Southern Region and will seek to explain why many rural water supply systems have not been sustainable, despite the emphasis that the government places on community involvement. Measures now being implemented to increase sustainability through more active and pragmatic community participation and through the use of appropriate technology will also be discussed.
format Default
Conference proceeding
author Michael Wood
author_facet Michael Wood
author_sort Michael Wood (4609180)
title Community participation in rural water supply
title_short Community participation in rural water supply
title_full Community participation in rural water supply
title_fullStr Community participation in rural water supply
title_full_unstemmed Community participation in rural water supply
title_sort community participation in rural water supply
publishDate 1991
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/29072
_version_ 1797281820237103104