Perceptions of Tanzanian smallholder irrigators on impact pathways between water equity and socio-economic inequalities

Date

2021-02-16

Authors

Manero, Ana
Wheeler, Sarah

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Abstract

Irrigation is promoted as a critical strategy for rural welfare, yet fundamental questions prevail on the linkages between water, equity and inequality. Applying mixed-methods, this study investigates the impact pathways whereby water inequities are associated with socioeconomic inequalities within two Tanzanian smallholder irrigation schemes. According to irrigators’ perceptions, greater water equity would benefit the poor through improved working conditions, productivity, reliability and reduced risk. Quantitative analyses corroborate that water-dissatisfied irrigators suffered from lower yields and higher unproductive land, investment losses and yield gaps. Education, empowerment and strong governance are proposed as possible avenues towards greater water equity and inclusive growth.

Description

Keywords

Inequality, irrigation, rural development, Sub-Saharan Africa, poverty, water equity

Citation

Source

International Journal of Water Resources Development

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

CC BY-NC-ND

Restricted until

2022-07-12